ABSTRACT

Although most studies of rural society in China deal with land villages, in fact very substantial numbers of Chinese people lived by the sea, on the rivers and the lakes. In land villages, mostly given to farming, people lived in permanent houses, whereas on the margins of the waterways many people lived in boats and sheds, and developed their own marked features, often being viewed as pariahs by the rest of Chinese society. This book examines these boat and shed living people. It takes an "historical anthropological" approach, combining research in official records with investigations among surviving boat and shed living people, their oral traditions and their personal records. Besides outlining the special features of the boat and shed living people, the book considers why pressures over time drove many to move to land villages, and how boat and shed living people were gradually marginalised, often losing their fishing rights to those who claimed imperial connections. The book covers the subject from Ming and Qing times up to the present.

chapter |30 pages

Introduction

Boat-and-shed living in land-based society

part |49 pages

As contemporary stereotypes

chapter |7 pages

Land supports fishing people

The fishermen of Dongting lake from the 1930s to the 1950s

chapter |17 pages

Going beyond pariah status

The boat people of Fuzhou in the Chinese People's Republic

chapter |14 pages

From sheds to houses

A Dan village in the Pearl river delta in the twentieth century