Asia
Reading the Rural Modern: Literacy and Morality in Republican China
By , University of California, Irvine (November 2008)
Section: Asia
Subject: History.
Places: China, Asia, Eastern Asia.
Abstract
This essay was runner-up in the 2007 History Compass Graduate Essay Prize, Asia Section.
In the mid-1920s many education reformers turned their attention away from the urban illiterates who had been the focus of recent mass education efforts and toward the countryside and rural residents instead. In order to engage rural readers, reformers created a body of literature that addressed rural issues, articulating a reformed vision of a modern countryside as they did so. As the most prominent of the mass education programs, the Mass Education Movement's publications reached millions of Chinese. On the pages of their 1920s publications, the MEM constructed a vision of a ‘rural modern’ that emphasized a literate citizenry as the basis of a reformed countryside and modern nation. In this way, even while reformers attempted to democratize access to knowledge, they affirmed a Confucian relationship of education to morality.
DOI: 10.1111/j.1478-0542.2008.00565.x
This article abstract has been viewed 2381 times.
Top 5 related articles
-
Nationalism in East Asia
By , University of Chicago
(Vol. 4, April 2006)
History Compass -
Synthesizing Citizenship in Modern China
By , Bard College
(Vol. 5, September 2007)
History Compass -
Globalizing Chinese History
By , Cambridge University
(Vol. 2, July 2004)
History Compass -
Globalization, Global History and Local Identity in ‘Greater China’
By , Rowan University; Peking University
(Vol. 8, April 2010)
History Compass -
The Tokugawa Bureaucracy and Urban Crises: A Revival of the Humanist Traditions of China and Japan in Ogyu Sorai's Political Writings
By , Independent Author
(Vol. 5, March 2007)
History Compass
Top 5 Related Blackwell Reference Chapters
New Histories of Literacy
Everybody knows what literacy is. It is what digital media puts at risk and what “at-risk” students are ...
By Patricia Crain
Bureaucracy and Literacy
Given the scale of government operations under the later Roman emperors, medieval rulers had potentially ...
By Richard Britnell
Literacy, Learning and Education
In 1882, Francis Adams wrote a notable account relating the story, as he saw it, of the ‘struggle for ...
By Philip Gardner
Military Documents, Languages, and Literacy
How did the Roman army maintain control over some 400,000 (at maximum) personnel, especially given their ...
By Sara Elise Phang
Why Fanny Can't Read: Joseph Andrews and the (Ir)relevance of Literacy
How simple are our notions about literacy. How directly and linearly we conceive its consequences. How ...
By Paula McDowell
From A Companion to the Eighteenth-Century English Novel and Culture