Chinese Cultural Renaissance
The Chinese Cultural Renaissance or the Chinese Cultural Renaissance Movement (Chinese: 中華文化復興運動; pinyin: Zhōnghuá Wénhuà Fùxīng Yùndòng) was a movement promoted in Taiwan to undo the cultural destructions caused by the Communist Party of China during the Cultural revolution.[1]
Movement
Chiang Kai-shek launched the movement on November 1966 - on the 100th anniversary of Sun Yat-sen's birthday - by publicly announcing the official start of the renaissance movement.[2] It was the Kuomintang's first structured plan for cultural development on Taiwan. Chiang himself was the head of the movement promotion council.[2] President Lee Teng-hui was also involved in the movement and served as the president for the cultural renaissance.[1]
Chiang announced ten goals:[2]
- To improve educational standards and promote family education with an emphasis on the Confucian principles of filial duty and fraternal love
- To reissue Chinese classic literary works and translate important works with a view toward disseminating Chinese culture abroad.
- To encourage the creation of new literary and art works that are relevant to contemporary society and informed by the ideals of the cultural renaissance
- To launch the government planning and construction of new theaters, opera houses, auditoriums, and art galleries, as well as stadiums throughout the country, and to improve existing facilities.
- To utilize all mass media for the promotion of the cultural renaissance with an emphasis upon encouraging good customs and morals.
- To guide the modernization of national life under the influence of the Confucian Principles of the "Four Social Controls" (propriety, rectitude, honesty and a sense of shame)[3] and the "Eight Virtues" (Loyalty, filial piety, benevolence, love, faithfulness, justice, harmony and peace), a goal to be achieved with the help of the newly launched New Life Movement.
- To promote tourism and the preservation of historical relics
- To increase support for overseas Chinese education, including the publication of newspapers and the promotion of cultural activities abroad.
- To maintain close ties with foreign institutions and intellectuals, particularly those whose research focuses on China.
- To revise tax statutes and regulations in order to encourage wealthy individuals, private industries, and businesses to make donations to government-endorsed cultural and educational establishments.
Chinese culture overlap Taiwanese culture
According to Tsiang Yien-si, the purpose of the renaissance movement was to affirm and restore traditional values in Chinese culture to help enrich the spiritual life in a society that was becoming increasingly materialistic. He said that there was never an attempt to unify Taiwanese culture and Chinese culture.[4]
See also
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China portal |
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Taiwan portal |
References
- ^ a b Wachman, Alan. [1994] (1994). Taiwan: National Identity and Democratization. M.E. Sharpe publishing. ISBN 1563243989. pg 274.
- ^ a b c Guy, Nancy. [2005] (2005). Peking Opera and Politics in Taiwan. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 0252029739.
- ^ De Bary, William Theodore; Lufrano, Richard John, eds (2001). Sources of Chinese Tradition: From 1600 Through the Twentieth Century. Introduction to Asian civilizations. 2 (2 ed.). Columbia University Press. p. 342. ISBN 9780231112710. http://books.google.com/books?id=g0aAjW8GU7kC. Retrieved 2011-11-05. "The meaning of Li, Yi, Lian, and Chi[.] [...] li, yi, lian, and chi have always been regarded as the foundations of the nation [...] they may be interpreted as follows: Li means 'regulated attitude.' Yi means 'right conduct.' Lian means 'clear discrimination.' Chi means 'real self-consciousness.'"
- ^ Rubinstein, Murray A. Bi-Ehr Chou. Bosco, Joseph. [1994] (1994). The Other Taiwan: 1945 to the Present. M.E. Sharpe publishing. ISBN 1563241927.