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By adopting oral history and fieldwork methods and exploring
historical data, this book chronologically depicts the development
of the schools and education in a village in North China over a
century. The book reveals how education and school life in the
rural village are being impacted not only by its own history and
traditions, but also by external powers; more specifically, the
development of rural schools is influenced by the tensions between
Chinese and Western culture, between history and reality, between
countryside and cities, and between national and local powers. In
essence, villagers' educational experience is actually a
battlefield for school education and local tradition - the
children's lives are dominated by school education, leaving local
traditions few opportunities to exert an influence. The study also
discusses how school education and local traditions have influenced
villagers' social mobility, a topic that has rarely been studied in
previous literature. In summary, rural schools have been developing
within an interactive network composed of various actors. With the
fading of national power since the 1980s, local rural actors have
enjoyed a much more liberal social and political space and thus now
play a more active role in rural education. Presenting a microcosm
that reflects the historical development of rural education in
China, the book is a valuable resource for researchers in the field
of in rural education, educational history, and educational
anthropology, as well as for readers interested in rural education
in China.
By adopting oral history and fieldwork methods and exploring
historical data, this book chronologically depicts the development
of the schools and education in a village in North China over a
century. The book reveals how education and school life in the
rural village are being impacted not only by its own history and
traditions, but also by external powers; more specifically, the
development of rural schools is influenced by the tensions between
Chinese and Western culture, between history and reality, between
countryside and cities, and between national and local powers. In
essence, villagers' educational experience is actually a
battlefield for school education and local tradition - the
children's lives are dominated by school education, leaving local
traditions few opportunities to exert an influence. The study also
discusses how school education and local traditions have influenced
villagers' social mobility, a topic that has rarely been studied in
previous literature. In summary, rural schools have been developing
within an interactive network composed of various actors. With the
fading of national power since the 1980s, local rural actors have
enjoyed a much more liberal social and political space and thus now
play a more active role in rural education. Presenting a microcosm
that reflects the historical development of rural education in
China, the book is a valuable resource for researchers in the field
of in rural education, educational history, and educational
anthropology, as well as for readers interested in rural education
in China.
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