Negotiating new cultured identities through stylizing Wenyan: the case of young Chinese in China and the Netherlands

被引:0
|
作者
Jia, Yan [1 ]
Aalberse, Suzanne [2 ]
Cornips, Leonie [3 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Maastricht Univ, Dept Literature & Art, Grote Gracht 90-92, NL-6211SZ Maastricht, Netherlands
[2] Univ Amsterdam, Dept Dutch Linguist, Spuistr 134, NL-1012 VB Amsterdam, Netherlands
[3] NL LAB Humanities Cluster KNAW, NL-1012 DK Maastricht, Netherlands
[4] Maastricht Univ, NL-1012 DK Maastricht, Netherlands
关键词
Hanfu; stylization; indexicality; cultured identity; migrants; non-rebellious youth practice; (sic)(sic); (sic)(sic)(sic); (sic)(sic)(sic)(sic); (sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic); STYLIZATION; MIGRATION; MIGRANTS; DYNAMICS; OTHERS;
D O I
10.1515/multi-2024-0134
中图分类号
H0 [语言学];
学科分类号
030303 ; 0501 ; 050102 ;
摘要
This article focuses on cultured identity construction via linguistic stylization among young domestic and external Chinese migrants. Based on ethnographic fieldwork in Beijing, China and the Netherlands, this study contends that self-defined Hanfu fans stylize the classical Wenyan register to invoke and align with a persona who is a member of the socioculturally recognizable Chinese literati. During this process, the use of the Wenyan register embodies the higher-order meanings of "cultured," "elegant," and distinctly "Chinese," while Hanfu carries the indexical significance of a cultured distinction, distinguishing educated people, who are expected to be familiar with it, from those who are less educated. Hanfu fans appropriate these cultured attributes to construct a Cainv (lit. 'talented woman') identity in the Chinese context but a cultured Chinese identity in the Dutch context. These identities render them distinct from other migrants, thereby linking the cultured attribute to a new migratory identity. Linguistic stylization and the pursuit of a cultured identity are ingrained within the mainstream narrative in China while at the same time transnationally reflecting the efforts of young Chinese to resist the marginalizing stereotypes of Chinese migrants. (sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic).(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic),(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic),(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic),(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic).(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic),(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)"(sic)(sic)(sic)", "(sic)(sic)"(sic)(sic)"(sic)(sic)(sic)"(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic).(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic),(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic).(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic),(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic),(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic),(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic),(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic).(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic),(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic)(sic).
引用
收藏
页数:25
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] PSYCHOLOGICAL TRAINING PROGRAMMES FOR YOUNG EMPLOYEES IN CHINA'S NEW ENERGY INDUSTRIES: A PHOTOVOLTAIC INDUSTRY CASE STUDY
    Sun, Qiaoxia
    LIGHT & ENGINEERING, 2016, 24 (03): : 170 - 173
  • [32] A new China: using sport to expose a multi-class race through the 1923 Chinese soccer tour of Australia
    Guoth, Nick
    SPORT IN SOCIETY, 2012, 15 (04) : 462 - 478
  • [33] Practising citizenship through online media: An interpretive case study of Chinese New Zealanders' civic engagement online
    Du, Yu
    MEDIA INTERNATIONAL AUSTRALIA, 2023,
  • [34] Assessing tourists' perceptions and behaviour through photographic and blog analysis: The case of Chinese bloggers and New Zealand holidays
    Sun, Minghui
    Ryan, Chris
    Pan, Steve
    TOURISM MANAGEMENT PERSPECTIVES, 2014, 12 : 125 - 133
  • [35] An evaluation of China's Kindergarten quality rating system through the Chinese early childhood environment rating scale - the Zhejiang case
    Hu, Bi Ying
    Vong, Keang-leng
    Mak, Miranda Chi Kuan
    EARLY YEARS, 2015, 35 (01) : 50 - 66
  • [36] Understanding multiscreening phenomenon for online shopping through perspective of self-regulation and dual process theory: Case of Chinese young generation
    Khan, Shahid Kalim
    Ali, Naqash
    Khan, Naseer Abbas
    Ammara, Ume
    Anjum, Naeen
    ELECTRONIC COMMERCE RESEARCH AND APPLICATIONS, 2020, 42
  • [37] How a Grid Company Could Enter the Hydrogen Industry through a New Business Model: A Case Study in China
    Xu, Danlu
    Liu, Zhoubin
    Shan, Rui
    Weng, Haixiao
    Zhang, Haoyu
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2023, 15 (05)
  • [38] N concentration of old leaves and twigs is more sensitive to stand density than that of young ones in Chinese fir plantations: a case study in subtropical China
    Yuebao Di
    Xiaoli Fu
    Huimin Wang
    Wenhua Li
    Silong Wang
    Journal of Forestry Research, 2018, 29 : 163 - 169
  • [39] N concentration of old leaves and twigs is more sensitive to stand density than that of young ones in Chinese fir plantations: a case study in subtropical China
    Di, Yuebao
    Fu, Xiaoli
    Wang, Huimin
    Li, Wenhua
    Wang, Silong
    JOURNAL OF FORESTRY RESEARCH, 2018, 29 (01) : 163 - 169
  • [40] N concentration of old leaves and twigs is more sensitive to stand density than that of young ones in Chinese fir plantations: a case study in subtropical China
    Yuebao Di
    Xiaoli Fu
    Huimin Wang
    Wenhua Li
    Silong Wang
    Journal of Forestry Research, 2018, 29 (01) : 163 - 169