Chinese tradition, ceremony,culture

Hendrik_2000

Lieutenant General
Over analyze article but still interesting. I don't believe Li Ziqi is the tool of Chinese propaganda She is just part of movement or yearning for more traditional way of life that is now swept thru China. Notice the increasing popularity of Hanfu among the young. Or the proliferation of museum in Chinese cities. Even traditional wedding costume and ceremony now becoming more popular Over at peranakan magazine China foremost Couturier Guo Pei was fascinated by peranakan wedding attire and draw inspiration from to design more traditional wedding attire. I am really proud that the peranakan preserve and guard the Chinese tradition in time to be rediscover in China. Peranakan life fascinated the Chinese
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She found it of all places in Paris when in 2010 The peranakan was invited by Louvre museum to exhibit peranakan way of life, fashion and customs And she visit it and fell in love with Penang baba wedding costume

Today, her gowns are a tribute to China’s rediscovery of its own history and heritage, after more than a decade of a government-sanctioned purging of the past. Guo Pei’s couture is a frenzied, feverish proclamation of Chinese identity. It is a celebration of thousands of years of artistic and cultural achievement. These are magnificent creations that negate the identity of their wearer, and instead proclaim loud and proud: China has arrived.
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Country life: the young female farmer who is now a top influencer in China
Adrienne Matei
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January 28, 2020, 3:00 AM CST
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Country life: the young female farmer who is now a top influencer in China
Since she began posting rustic-chic videos of her life in rural Sichuan province in 2016, Li Ziqi, 29, has become one of China’s biggest social media stars. She has 22 million followers on the microblogging site Weibo, 34 million on Douyin (China’s version of TikTok) and another 8.3 million on YouTube (Li has been active on YouTube for the last two years, despite it being officially blocked in China).

Li’s videos – which she initially produced by herself and now makes with a small team – emphasize beautiful countryside and ancient tradition. In videos soundtracked by tranquil flute music, Li crafts her own furniture out of bamboo and dyes her clothing with fruit skins. If she wants soy sauce, she grows the soybeans themselves; a video about making an egg yolk dish starts with her hatching ducklings. The meals she creates are often elaborate demonstrations of how many delicious things can be done with a particular seasonal ingredient, like ginger or green plums.

There is even a Li Ziqi online shop, where fans can purchase versions of the steel “chopper” knife she uses to dice the vegetables she plucks from her plentiful garden, or replicas of the old-fashioned shirts she wears while foraging for wild mushrooms and magnolia blossoms in the misty mountainside.

While she occasionally reveals a behind-the-scenes peek at her process, Li – who did not respond to interview requests for this article – is very private. By all accounts, she struggled to find steady work in a city before returning to the countryside to care for her ailing grandmother (who appears in her videos).

Recently, Li has been thrust into a wider spotlight by the Chinese government, who seem to have realized her soft power potential. In 2018, the Communist party of China named her a “good young netizen” and role model for Chinese youth. In September 2019, the People’s Daily, a CPC mouthpiece, gave Li their “People’s Choice” award, while last month, state media praised Li for helping to promote traditional culture globally, and the Communist Youth League named her an ambassador of a program promoting the economic empowerment of rural youth.

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As the government increasingly champions her, Chinese citizens have taken to Weibo to question whether Li’s polished, rather one-dimensional portrayal of farm work conveys anything truly meaningful about contemporary China – especially to her growing international audience on YouTube.

They have a point: Li’s videos reveal as much about the day-to-day labor of most Chinese farmers as the Martha Stewart Show does the American working class. As Li Bochun, director of Beijing-based Chinese Culture Rejuvenation Research Institute told the media last month: “The traditional lifestyle Li Ziqi presents in her videos is … not widely followed.”

In reality, many of China’s rural villages have shrunk or disappeared completely in past decades as the nation prioritized urbanization and workers migrated to cities, with research suggesting the country lost 245 rural villages a day from 2000 to 2010. The 40% of China’s population still living in rural areas encompass a huge diversity of experience, yet life can be difficult, with per-capita rural income declining sharply since 2014 and environmental pollution often as rife as in industrial centers. That’s not to say the beautiful forests and compelling traditions of Li’s videos are not genuine – like many social media creators, she simply focuses on the most charming elements of a bigger picture.

So what do Li’s videos reflect about modern China, if not average daily life in the countryside?

For one, they say something about the mindset of her mainland audience – primarily urban millennials, for whom a traditional culture craze known as “fugu” or “hanfu” has been an aesthetic trend for a number of years.

“Fugu”, according to Yang Chunmei, professor of Chinese history and philosophy at Qufu Normal University, reflects the “romanticized, pastoral” desires of youth “disillusioned by today’s ever-changing, industrial, consumerist society.” In practice, it looks like young people integrating more traditional clothing into their daily looks, watching historical dramas and following rural lifestyle influencers like Li. (While Li is an extremely popular example of the trend, she’s not the only young farmer vlogging in China right now, and outdoor cooking videos of people making meals with wild ingredients and scant equipment are a genre of their own on Douyin.)
 
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Hendrik_2000

Lieutenant General
(Cont)
Among urban millennials in the west, giving up the nine-to-five grind and living humbly and closer to nature is a popular dream. In China, the contemporary experience of burnout is compounded by the intensity of “urban disease”, an umbrella term for the difficulties of living in megacities like Shanghai or Guangzhou, which can be used to refer to everything from traffic jams and poor air quality to employment and housing scarcity.

Also at play in Li’s popularity is the particular tenor of Chinese wistfulness. “It’s called xiangchou. Xiang means the countryside or rural life, and chou means to long for it, to miss it,” says Linda Qian, an Oxford University PhD candidate studying nostalgia’s role in the revitalization of China’s villages.

“It is quite prevalent for youth living the city life. They get really sick of [the city] so the countryside” – or a fantasy of it – “looks increasingly like the ideal image of what a good life should be.”

Qian also likens Li’s appeal to that of “Man vs Wild”-style entertainment in the west. “We’ve gotten to a certain point of materialism and consumption where there’s only so much you can buy, and we’re like, ‘What other experiences can I have?’” she says. “So we go back to what humans can do.”

Yet as her fame grows internationally, some have questioned, in comments, blogposts and Reddit threads, whether Li’s channel is communist propaganda.

In addition to providing China a form of international PR, Li embodies a kind of rural success the government hopes to generate more of through recent initiatives. With the aim of alleviating rural poverty, the Communist Youth League has embarked on an effort to send more than 10 million urban youth to “rural zones” by 2022, in order to “increase their skills, spread civilization, and promote science and technology”.

“We need young people to use science and technology to help the countryside innovate its traditional development models,” Zhang Linbin, deputy head of a township in central Hunan province, told the Global Times last April.

By using technology to create her own rural economic opportunities while simultaneously championing forms of traditional Chinese culture before a huge audience, Li may seem like a CPC dream come true.

According to Professor Ka-Ming Wu, a cultural anthropologist at the Chinese University of Hong Kong: “Li represents a new wave of Chinese soft power in that she’s so creative and aesthetically good, and knows how to appeal to a general audience whether they’re Chinese or not.” And yet, “I don’t think this is some kind of engineered effort by the Chinese state,” she says.

Li’s narrative hinges on her failure to thrive in the city; that failure is antithetical to China’s overarching narrative of progress and urban opportunity. Were she a manufactured agent of propaganda, Wu speculates, “[Her failure] is something the Chinese state would never even mention.

“And I think that’s what really fuels her popularity,” says Wu. “That despair of not being able to find oneself in the ‘Chinese dream’. I don’t think she’s propaganda because one of her major successes is that she’s making that failure highly aesthetic … However, the Chinese government is very smart to appropriate her work and say that she represents traditional culture and promote her.”

According to some Chinese media, Li’s content is better than propaganda – doing more to generate genuine domestic, and especially international, interest in rural Chinese traditions than any government initiative of the past decade. “Dozens of government departments with billions at their disposal spent 10 years on propaganda projects, but they have done a worse job than a little girl,” writes the South China Morning Post’s Chauncey Jung, summarizing a tweet from journalist Jasper Jia.

However you feel about Li as a cultural force, her ability to flourish despite a unique set of contradictory circumstances is impressive. Out of the past and present, failure and success, independence and authoritarianism, she’s spun a truly pleasant vision. If only life was really so simple.
 

Hendrik_2000

Lieutenant General
Moving tribute to peranakan culture and share identity

Guo Pei can be easily missed in a crowd. Dressed simply in plain black, the diminutive designer does not demand attention like a diva or surround herself with sycophants. Her welcoming smile, when we spotted her walking among the towering mannequins, is like meeting an old friend you grew up with who never changed.

Despite the enormous global recognition since that Rihanna moment, Guo Pei warmly obliges anyone who wants a photograph with her, and makes eye contact when she speaks. Her passion for Chinese culture is sincere in her tone of voice. It is obviously the inspiration that drives more than 500 artisans in her Rose Studio to realise her opulent fantasies in embroidery, bead and silk. Guo Pei is today the only Chinese member of the prestigious Chambre Syndicale de la Haute Couture, showcasing her works at the most coveted events in the fashion world.

The mother of two who never had a wedding of her own was one of the first in China to push for the comeback of the Chinese traditional bridal dress. The challenge was, she could hardly find any at home. She searched outside China and found what she was looking for, of all places, in a Paris museum. Guo Pei was enthralled. “I was taken by the beauty of the Peranakan wedding outfit – its breathtaking colours, details and accessories brought out the art of everyday life.” The Chinese influences, she says, were evident in its shape, intricate embroidery technique and symbolic auspicious images. Yet it was uniquely “a cross-cultural artwork that was both Chinese and South-east Asian”.

I was greatly inspired and encouraged by this exhibition (in Paris). It had a particularly significant impact on the design of my entire Chinese brides collection,” says Guo Pei. She is just as fascinated with Peranakan beadwork which is “so extremely exquisite that, even today, we find it difficult to reproduce.” Guo Pei continues to keep connected with Singapore and the Peranakan community. Since discovering the Peranakan Museum in 2010, “

I have made sure I visit it at least once on every visit to Singapore.”Singapore was the first country Guo Pei chose to travel to in the 1990s and she feels the affinity as we “share the same ancestry and cultural heritage”, remarking that “some traces of China’s seemingly lost culture can be seen in Singapore, so I do have a special love for Singapore.
 

Tam

Brigadier
Registered Member
Don't forget, there is also Dianxi Xiaoge for traditional life country food blogging. Her YouTube subscriber and views also run by the millions.

 

Tam

Brigadier
Registered Member
Here is another one. I am discovering a hidden wave inside YouTube. Furthermore, this country food vlogging style is also being used by other food vloggers in other countries. There appears to be more. Scratching the surface here.





 

Hendrik_2000

Lieutenant General
Introducing Jade emperor festival which fall of the 9th day after Lunar new year It is special day for the Hokkien, Baba community. Not so well known for even most Chinese. here is the background.
Notice the sugar cane plant that always present in any festival by Hokkien community
The Birthday of Jade Emperor, King of Heaven
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. 2020 Chinese New Year Day is on Saturday, January 25, 2020. Chinese New Year Day is a new moon day, which is the first lunar day. The 9th lunar day of the first lunar month is Sunday, February 2, 2020. This date is the Birthday of Jade Emperor, the king of the Heaven.

According to Taoism (Daoism), the Jade Emperor lives in the 33rd heaven and governs 33 heavens; so he is the king of heavens. Jade Emperor is a vegetarian. To celebrate his birthday, Chinese prepare three bundles of long noodle, three tea cups with green tea, five different kinds of fruit and six different kinds of dry vegetables to worship Jade Emperor. But people also prepare five animal sacrifices, different sweet cakes and turtle cake (turtle is a symbol of longevity) on a different table for Jade Emperor's guardian soldiers.

To show the sincerity, many people take bath on the 8th lunar night, and then wait for the first minute of 9th lunar day to begin the ceremony with their clean body. After the ceremony, Chinese explode the firecrackers. That's why we can hear the scattered sound of fire crackers from midnight to sunrise. The temple of Jade Emperor will be crowded as the Chinese New Year day at the night of 8th lunar day for those people unable to hold the worship event at home. For the same purpose, Chinese always pray for better luck, safety, health, love or money, when they visit the temple.


Click the CC close caption it has english subtitle
 
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