This essay intends to build off the
discussion of 闲话 from my
last post. 闲话, which may be translated
literally as “leisurely conversation,” or more accurately as gossip, is, as I
have previously said, a fundamental and indispensable part of Chinese society. This essay also should include discussion of
judgment, and the ways in which Chinese people judge each other. I intend for these topics to lead into a
discussion of group orientation as a societal factor.
In China, especially in smaller towns
(for example the one in which I am currently residing), untrue or partially
true rumors spread with an astounding frequency and rapidity. Everyone will recognize this, recognize that
these rumors are most often falsified, or at least heavily twisted versions of
the truth, and claim to despise it. However,
through conversations with endless numbers of people about this, I’ve realized
that no one thinks they do it.
The best example I can provide (as it is
the one I’ve most thoroughly discussed and investigated) is Scott’s girlfriend
(who incidentally is his girlfriend again, by the way), Luo Wen. Luo Wen is a student on the B campus of Yibin College. B campus students rarely interact with A
campus students, and there is a great deal of prejudice among both
parties. Luo Wen dislikes
instantaneously any student from A campus.
Why? According to her it is because
they judge her and look down on her. We
ask her, isn’t that judging them, looking down on them? She insists it is different. That she has a good reason to dislike all of
them, and they just dislike her because of the campus on which she
studies. Further, when she partakes in
gossip discussing these people, she sees it as reasonable and believes all that
she and her friends are saying is true, yet it is unreasonable and mud-raking for
them to do the same thing.
Try as we may, we can not make her see that
these two actions are exactly the same.
They are convinced they have a perfectly legitimate reason for gossiping
about her, for looking down on her. It
is precisely this mindset that propagates the problem of gossip.
This is to a certain extent the inevitable
product of their group-oriented society - the mindset that those ones my group
are good, those outside that group are bad.
How could one of them possibly
look down on me? I am good, and they are not as good as me,
and the fact that they would spread lies about me only reinforces my previous
judgment of them as bad.
My experience in China has forced me to reexamine my
ideas of what group-orientation on a societal level meant. I knew very little about Japanese society,
upon which my extrapolations as to the meanings and implications of
“group-orientation” were based, and nothing about Chinese society. Western society, being mostly individual-oriented,
places (at least in theory) the focus on each person, giving each person a
chance to make it on their own - the endlessly referenced pulling up of oneself
by his own bootstraps. My assumption was
if they are not individual oriented, group orientation meant focus on society
as a whole which is to the best of my knowledge true in Japan - should you
happen to find a coin in the return slot of a vending machine you must not take
it, because how will that person feel if they come back looking for their money
only to find it is not there? Japan has a
much more societally-focused concept of behavior, and my, apparently erroneous,
assumption was that this would translate to Chinese society as well.
In fact, it does not. I was shocked at how rude the Chinese can be
to someone they don’t know - shoving people, cutting in line, yelling in ears,
gossip, etc. People from one province
hate people from other provinces, people from one town hate people from another
town, people from campus A hate people from Campus B. How could a country like this be called
group-oriented? How could a country like
this possibly accept socialism, a system designed to make sure everyone in
society got what they needed? They hate
each other!
I quickly had to rethink what
group-orientation meant. What it means
in China is that there are too many people for you to possibly care about all
of them, so you must do everything you can for those inside your
monkey-sphere,
though you are not required in any way to care for anyone outside that
circle. This makes each person able to work
as hard as they can for their group and not feel bad if it’s not good for
someone else. Most countries that change
to a socialist system have the same reasoning - “it makes sure I get what I
need, and I don’t care if you do or not, I’m taken care of.”
Considering the Chinese disregard for
society as a whole, for that man on the bus, for the pedestrian crossing the
street, we may be led to ask: is the Chinese group much smaller than that of
the West? The answer is no, but how can
this be explained? Firstly, the West has
had metropolises much longer than China, and as such we have had time
to develop a concept of proper behavior in a crowded city. There will always be more people around than can
fit in your group, so how do we deal with this?
In the West we’ve decided that the answer lies in just treating others
as you would like them to treat you. The
Chinese have either not thought about this problem, or, after considering it
have decided that the best thing to do is just live your own life and worry
about your own business. In fact, the
Chinese group is much larger than that of the West. The concept of family is larger (for example
most Chinese people don’t understand how Scott and I can leave our families for
a year, many don’t even understand why we would go to another city to study,
even though many of their classmates have done the same), people closer to you
are referred to as “elder brother,” “Younger sister,” etc. In fact, people within their larger sphere
are held much more closely than those inside our smaller sphere. The difference lies in how we treat those
outside our group. The West we maintain
a polite distance, the Chinese don’t seem to mind in the least disregarding
your humanity.
And yet, the contradiction arises: why is
it that the Chinese will refuse to be concerned for the well being of others,
yet let gossip be so important? Why does
it matter to Ding Li if the lady who sells rice makes a derogatory comment
about him to the man who shines shoes? Moreover,
why is Lao Wang willing to dehumanize Xiao Bai one second on the bus, then
spend the next hour discussing how he saw her with a foreigner? More academically stated, what explains the variation
in concern for other people? The answer
offered by Chinese people when asked this question (“They’re bored”) is
unsatisfactory.
The other question which remains in this
discussion is: is the variation in severity of gossip, importance of the opinion
of others, and willingness to make snap judgments explained satisfactorily by
the differences in orientation of society?
In my thinking about this problem, I’ve decided that for the most part
these phenomena can be pinned on the focus of society: individual or
group. However, in China the
repercussions of gossip are much more severe than in other group-oriented
societies, though it is certainly more present and severe in those societies
than in our Western society. The
variation in severity is still something I am struggling to explain.