Presenting the Past
TL;DR: This paper explored how residents of a small agricultural community in the prosperous eastern province of Zhejiang have constructed and discussed their own narratives of history in relation to the actions and power of the Chinese state over the course of the twentieth century.
read more
Abstract: In China, successive political upheavals have impacted directly on the attitudes and identities of citizens. This paper explores how residents of a small agricultural community in the prosperous eastern province of Zhejiang have constructed and discussed their own narratives of history—in relation to the actions and power of the Chinese state—over the course of the twentieth century. For the three generations concerned—grandparents, parents and their adult children—distinct events divide their experiences into clearly-defined local categories of ‘before’ and ‘after’. Respectively, these were: (1) land reforms following the Communist victory and establishment of the People’s Republic in 1949; (2) the adoption of the socialist market economy by the administration of Deng Xiaoping; (3) the increasing opportunities, mobility and consumerism of the last decade. A consideration of generational differences is shown to be crucial to understanding social memory as people and societies forget, remember and forge their identities.
Keywords: censorship, China, intergenerational transmission, nation state, social memory
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
References
The Politics of Memory: Native Historical Interpretation in the Colombian Andes
Stephen F Gudeman,Joanne Rappaport +1 more
- 01 Sep 1991
TL;DR: In this paper, Niquinas, a contemporary Paez historian, describes the creation of a chiefdom and the transformation of the chiefdom from sharecropper to Caudillo.
203
Remembering the Other: Knowledge and Recognition in the Exploration of Central Africa
TL;DR: The main importance of recognition as the link between ideology and iconology is that it shifts both "sciences" from an epistemological "cognitive" ground (the knowledge of objects by subjects) to an ethical, political, and hermeneutic ground as discussed by the authors.
86