RATTAN WEAVING IN NANHAI

来源 :汉语世界(The World of Chinese) | 被引量 : 0次 | 上传用户:junee1122
下载到本地 , 更方便阅读
声明 : 本文档内容版权归属内容提供方 , 如果您对本文有版权争议 , 可与客服联系进行内容授权或下架
论文部分内容阅读
  Traditions persist in China’s wicker capital
  “藤编之乡”广东南海:流淌于指尖的素雅与精巧
  Cozy and functional, natural wicker furniture has been the style of choice for millennia—a method of crafting rigid plant stalks, branches, or shoots to form household furniture that can last through the ages. And, for malleability and reliability, there is no better medium than rattan.
  Nanhai (南海), a district in Foshan City, Guangdong Province, is known as the “Land of Rattan Weaving” (藤編之乡). To some extent, the rattan weaving of Nanhai is so common that it’s more of a career choice than a traditional handicraft.
  When you enter any of the rattan-weaving factories of Nanhai, you’ll find workers and their wicker at busy machines, crafting some of the finest rattan works in the world. Whether they’re crafting furniture or artworks, the job itself is not one that demands many requirements. After some simple training, new laborers join in the manufacturing process and are paid on a piecework basis, which might sound bad, but it ends up being far above the local salaries that low-skilled workers can find in the area. As long as workers put in the hours, it’s a secure, comfortable position. Children can often be found in the factories, accompanied by their busy parents, and some might even pitch in to make a little extra holiday money.
  Rattan weaving has a long Chinese history that can be traced back more than 2,000 years. Rattan remnants of bags and baskets have been found dating back to the Warring States period (475 BCE – 221 BCE). At the time, Li Bing, a Chinese administrator and engineer, who was in charge of preventing floods, asked people to build dams with rattan baskets full of rocks to control the water.
  As rattan is both pliable and tough, it was also made into shields for the battlefield. When it came to the Tang Dynasty (618 – 907), weaving techniques had improved to an art form and people could weave complex curtains patterned with different kinds of flowers, birds, fish, and insects.
  It wasn’t until the Ming (1368 – 1644) and Qing (1644 – 1911) dynasties that rattan weaving would truly mature as an industry. Rattan furniture and household goods became very popular, especially in the areas around Guangzhou. According to Guangdong Xin Yu (《广东新语》), a work of chorography written by QuDajun (屈大均) in the Qing Dynasty, in Lingnan—a region encompassing the modern Chinese provinces of Jiangxi, Hunan, Guangdong, Guangxi, and Hainan—“Of every ten households, there would be two weaving rattan.” (其织作藤器者,十家而二。)
  However, in the modern day, the rattan-weaving industry seems to have met with subtle embarrassment. As factory furniture can be churned out made of pretty much anything, rattan furniture is fighting to survive. However, it is a traditional industry the local government is trying to keep alive, and the Nanhai authorities opened rattan-weaving training schools in an attempt to maintain and hand down this traditional craft—even though it didn’t exactly take off. However, rattan weaving is not a dying art. The industry is stable and will probably stay that way for a long time to come. For us, it’s just a cheap furniture option, but for the people of Nanhai, it’s a way of life—one they take great pride in.
其他文献
随着市场经济的发展,我国职业教育逐渐由精英化转向大众化,职业院校所承担的教育压力越来越重。生源数量的急剧增长,还在一定程度上增加了学生的就业竞争压力。在这样的环境背景下,职业生涯规划管理,有利于指导学生学习成长,对提高他们的就业竞争力也大有裨益,是职业院校教育体系中不可或缺的一部分。本文以职业院校学生为研究对象,在对其职业生涯规划现状做出分析和论述的基础上,就学生职业生涯管理策略进行了探索。  【