999精品在线视频,手机成人午夜在线视频,久久不卡国产精品无码,中日无码在线观看,成人av手机在线观看,日韩精品亚洲一区中文字幕,亚洲av无码人妻,四虎国产在线观看 ?

When China Goes on the Road

2022-02-25 13:44:32CaiTao
漢語世界(The World of Chinese) 2022年1期
關鍵詞:歷史文化

A new book by historian Yajun Mo reveals the through lines linking Chinese travelers, past and present

在一本民國歷史書中,發現旅行文化的前世今生

Text by Jeremiah Jenne

Illustration by Cai Tao

Mass tourism in China is not a new phenomenon. In , historian Yajun Mo explores the development of the travel industry in China in the Republican era, a time when urbanites took to the rails, roads, rivers, and even skies to see the sights of their nation—and eerily prefigures some of the challenges facing China’s tourism industry a century later.

Mo, an associate professor of history at Boston College, describes how tourist activities in the years before 1949 “allowed Chinese citizens to redefine postimperial China in a period of dramatic political change.” Modern transportation allowed tourists to explore once difficult-to-access regions. New business models, including the first major domestic travel agency, the China Travel Service, offered ticket services and tour packages to cater to demand.

The expansion of print media in early 20th-century Chinese cities led to popular specialty magazines like China Travel, whose travel articles and photographs inspired readers to plan their voyages. Mo argues participating in travel and tourism was a novel form of leisure for a burgeoning Chinese urban elite. Travel as recreation was seen as vogue and Western, a way to display wealth and allow travelers to present an image of sophistication and modernity.

According to Mo, Chinese travelers were also part of a zeitgeist, to build a coherent and unified nation from the ruins of the Qing Empire. Scholars and researchers—as well as more adventurous tourists—traveled into the frontiers of the new nation.

Tourism in China’s southwestern regions after the Republic of China moved its capital to Chongqing in 1937, and to Taiwan after the war against Japan ended in 1945, allowed patriotic tourists to symbolically claim sovereignty over contested areas. As Mo argues, “These diverse forms of modern travel contributed to the imagination of China as a congruent national space.”

Tourism was not only a way for Chinese to define the boundaries of their own nation, but to reclaim their country after nearly a century of foreign imperialism. Early 20th-century Chinese travelers described by Mo shared their transportation and destinations with foreign tourists and expatriate residents, the latter seeking to re-create Western-style tourism spaces inside China.

Particularly galling for Chinese travelers, writes Mo, were policies of racial segregation for accommodation and transport, creating “racial boundaries that differentiated Western-style tourism spaces from the rest of China.”

Colonialism and colonialist attitudes have long played a part in the evolution of the travel industry. As early as the 18th century, Thomas Cook promised his clients the means to see the magical sights of the British Empire while assuring they would be protected from being ripped off or robbed by ungrateful locals. Even today, colonial nostalgia continues to play a role in attracting visitors to Asia—the official website of the Astor in Tianjin lauds how the historic hotel “evokes the romance of a bygone era.”

Chinese travelers were not immune to some of these same colonialist attitudes. Mo describes how the Chinese academic Liu Bannong, who journeyed to northwestern China with the Swedish geographer Sven Hedin in the 1920s, complained about Hedin’s use of the term “expedition” (translated as 遠征) to refer to their mission. Expeditions, as Liu Bannong and his Chinese colleagues understood them, “were carried out among the ‘blacks and savages,’ and it would be insulting to use the term in China, a country with an ancient culture,” Mo writes.

Yet Hedin and Liu shared an attitude toward the regions through which they were traveling. The European explorer and the Chinese scholar considered the frontiers of the old Qing Empire as places to be explored. Liu and the other Chinese scholars on the trip “had no qualm about considering the non-Han peoples in the Northwest as less civilized,” writes Mo.

While the book does not cover the post-1949 period, Mo’s research suggests some interesting continuities between tourism in China in the early 20th century and today. There were over 3.43 billion domestic trips in China last year, a 19 percent increase over 2020. The China Tourism Academy expects that trend to continue in 2022, estimating domestic tourism will be at about 70 percent of pre-pandemic totals this year.

Many of the trends that drove the rise of tourism in an earlier era are part of the 21st-century expansion, including greater disposable wealth, increasingly sophisticated media, and significant infrastructure improvements that make travel easier and destinations more accessible. While overt racial segregation is no longer an issue between foreign and Chinese tourists traveling in China, similar conflicts over issues of sovereignty, representation, and travel culture persist into the 21st century.

On modern international travel websites like Trip Advisor, non-Chinese travelers to popular destinations like Lijiang Old Town in Yunnan province, and the karst mountains surrounding Yangshuo in Guangxi, lament “hordes” of Chinese tourists or offer wistful reminisces of these places before they were “discovered” by domestic travelers. International travel guides to China warn about the creeping influence of commercialization and a lack of “authenticity.”

At the same time, portrayals of western China and non-Han nationalities in contemporary Chinese travel literature reveal a similar fixation on the sensual and the exotic. Domestic travel agencies advertise excursions to ethnic minority regions in Yunnan and other parts of China using colorful photos of women in traditional clothing, emphasizing the people’s singing, dancing, and handicrafts.

This is also not a new phenomenon. Mo’s book examines how representation of non-Han people in Republican-era print culture often emphasized frontier regions’ unusual, colorful, and sensual attractions. This production of knowledge about frontier regions helped bind those areas to the center while also implicitly reinforcing the idea that the nation would come to be defined by Han sensibilities.

Traveling to new places is a magical experience, but it is not a politically inert act. Whether it’s Anthony Bourdain eating pig anus in Africa, or ordinary travelers looking for that perfect selfie to put on Instagram or WeChat, how people travel, where they go, and how they interact, interpret, and represent what they have seen shape and reinforce perceptions of those places. Mo’s book carries a reminder of the powerful influence travel has on our world, and the people we leave behind when we pack our suitcases and head back home.

Kingdom of Characters

The making of modern Chinese was far from smooth. In this highly readable account, Jing Tsu, professor of East Asian languages at Yale University, outlines the reform and standardization of the language during the 20th century, in tandem with China’s wider attempts at modernization. Jing also discusses the difficulty of adapting tens of thousands of Chinese characters to Western communication systems, from Morse code to typewriters to iPhones.

The Artisans: AVanishing Chinese Village

Now living in Paris, writer Shen Fuyu has a complicated relationship with his home village in Jiangsu province, which he left aged 18. It was for him both a place of backwardness and nostalgia. He has witnessed its decay over the years with every return visit on the Lunar New Year—the advancing urban sprawl, the families moving away, the homes being demolished. Now considering himself “rootless,” Shen digs through the memories of his father and grandfather to record the history of a village that once held tens of thousands of people, but now nearly ceases to exist.

Flowers of Lhasa

A long-term Lhasa resident, TseringYangkyi paints a vivid portrait of her city, both ancient and highly modern. This novel follows the story of three Tibetan and one Han Chinese women, migrant workers who’ve traveled to Lhasa in search of a better life. Their tales intertwine when they meet in a nightclub, working as prostitutes. Their struggles to survive lead the reader through the cruel underbelly of modern Tibetan city life. The book was originally published in Tibetan in 2016, and the translation by Christopher Peacock has won an English PEN award.– Alex Colville

猜你喜歡
歷史文化
文化與人
中國德育(2022年12期)2022-08-22 06:16:18
以文化人 自然生成
年味里的“虎文化”
金橋(2022年2期)2022-03-02 05:42:50
“國潮熱”下的文化自信
金橋(2022年1期)2022-02-12 01:37:04
誰遠誰近?
新歷史
全體育(2016年4期)2016-11-02 18:57:28
歷史上的6月
歷史上的九月
歷史上的八個月
歷史上的5月
主站蜘蛛池模板: 久无码久无码av无码| 精品午夜国产福利观看| 免费又黄又爽又猛大片午夜| 毛片三级在线观看| 秋霞午夜国产精品成人片| 欧美不卡在线视频| 国产成人啪视频一区二区三区| 国产精品密蕾丝视频| 亚洲欧美日韩另类在线一| 欧美日在线观看| 国产精品无码久久久久久| 亚洲精品无码AⅤ片青青在线观看| 亚洲国产午夜精华无码福利| 久久男人资源站| 色一情一乱一伦一区二区三区小说 | 国产久草视频| 亚洲欧美极品| 操操操综合网| a级毛片免费网站| 伊人久久婷婷五月综合97色| 天堂成人在线视频| 毛片免费在线| 国产永久在线视频| 伊人激情综合| 真实国产乱子伦高清| 久久一日本道色综合久久| 国产在线观看第二页| 最新精品久久精品| 亚洲精品无码成人片在线观看| 亚洲色无码专线精品观看| 欧美精品v| 精品无码日韩国产不卡av| 国产精品xxx| 亚洲成人高清在线观看| 毛片卡一卡二| 免费a在线观看播放| 国产黄在线免费观看| 日韩a在线观看免费观看| 亚洲天堂在线免费| 日韩第九页| 国产成熟女人性满足视频| 麻豆精品在线播放| 91人妻在线视频| 中国一级特黄视频| AV在线天堂进入| 国产乱子精品一区二区在线观看| 欧美激情视频二区| 高清国产va日韩亚洲免费午夜电影| 久久精品国产在热久久2019| 538国产视频| 波多野结衣久久高清免费| 欧美在线国产| 国产在线精品网址你懂的| 国产乱子伦视频三区| 免费av一区二区三区在线| 欧美色图第一页| 午夜毛片免费观看视频 | 久久福利片| 国产午夜人做人免费视频中文| 亚洲成av人无码综合在线观看| 亚洲成A人V欧美综合| 久久久久久久久久国产精品| 中文字幕av一区二区三区欲色| 18黑白丝水手服自慰喷水网站| 女人av社区男人的天堂| 2020精品极品国产色在线观看 | 狠狠综合久久久久综| 人妻21p大胆| 亚洲国产日韩在线成人蜜芽| 99免费视频观看| 五月天综合婷婷| 任我操在线视频| 国产成人夜色91| 成人免费网站久久久| 中国精品久久| 成人午夜网址| 国产在线拍偷自揄拍精品| 99在线免费播放| 国产在线第二页| 伊人丁香五月天久久综合 | 日韩一区二区在线电影| 婷婷色丁香综合激情|