ABSTRACT

As the famous sociologist Fei Xiaotong argued, “the real life of most Chinese can only be seen in the villages.” Peasants not only comprise a significant part of the Chinese population but represent a distinctive culture and one that is expressed in its own particular way. This makes for an important area of study for scholars in communication studies.

This volume investigates how Chinese peasants express their culture and adapt to social change. The author’s research consists of participant observation and interviews of shadow puppetry artists in Guanzhong, China, illustrating how peasant artists have adapted to the historical and social changes since the founding of the People’s Republic of China. He discovers that Chinese peasants integrate urban popular culture with their own aesthetic criteria, even if the mainstream discourse of the Chinese community overlooks the subjectivity of peasants. He goes on to put forwards a creative analytical framework for the studies of the dynamics of “subject-time-space.”

Scholars and students of anthropology, sociology, and communication studies, especially rural communication studies, will find this an ideal case study.

chapter 1|24 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|20 pages

Overview of fieldwork

chapter 3|33 pages

1956

Rediscovery of peasant culture

chapter 4|32 pages

1963

Socialist expression of peasant culture

chapter 5|21 pages

1984

The disintegration of the production team and the decline of rural culture

chapter 6|34 pages

2006

Illusionary prosperity of peasant culture in the discourse of intangible cultural heritage

chapter 7|14 pages

Communication

Rediscovering the countryside

chapter |6 pages

Conclusion

A sick oyster bears pearls: an unfinished story