Abstract

This article is a research report involving three anthropological studies conducted during the period of “Kuige” and their “re-studies.” By narrating the project, I set forth my views on the connections and differences between Chinese anthropological explorations from two historical periods. These anthropological explorations refer to the study of Lu Village conducted by Fei Xiaotong, that of “West Town” (Xizhou) by Francis L. K. Hsu, and that of “Pai-IPai” (Dai) villages by Tien Ju-Kang. They were all completed in the late 1930s and early 1940s. Each writer extracted a framework to analyze the land system, ancestor worship, and the relationship between humans and gods from the writer’s own field experience. Despite the difference in research methods, all three studies noticed the cultural differences between rural society and modernity. Since 2000, Peking University and Yunnan Minzu University have launched a “Province-university Cooperation Project.” During the project, a research team formed of several young scholars revisited Lu Village, “West Town” (Xizhou), and Namu Village. These writers’ works were based on the data acquired in their fieldwork and drew upon the opinions raised by global anthropologists on “re-study” in recent decades. Considering the dual effects of social change and shifts in academic concepts around “follow-up research,” the scholars put forward several points of view with their ethnographies, which all featured the characteristics of inheritance and reflection. Based on the results of the three “re-studies,” this article emphasizes the importance of the study of public rituals for the research of rural society. This article also attempts to re-examine the methodology of “human ecology,” which profoundly impacts Chinese anthropology and sociology.

Highlights

  • In the 1930s and 1940s, Yunnan became one of the main anthropological fieldwork sites in China

  • The first fieldwork of the Co-PI project was conducted at Lu Village, where Fei Xiaotong and Zhang Zhiyi had studied

  • When Fei Xiaotong first set foot in Lu Village, he was concerned about the following matters: What does the land system look like in a rural area that is little influenced by modern industry and commerce? As a rural area still mostly self-sufficient, will it attract large amounts of the township and municipal funds with land rights? will rural land rights be concentrated in towns and cities, resulting in big landlords moving away from the land? (Fei et al 1990) Fei Xiaotong had already noticed the importance of land rights in Peasant Life in China

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Summary

Introduction

In the 1930s and 1940s, Yunnan became one of the main anthropological fieldwork sites in China.

Results
Conclusion
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