10/19/08

Culture...?

The bus bumps along the windy mountain road. Our tour guide is talking, but in Chinese of course; apparently he’s funny though, because the people in the seats around me are laughing. I squeeze my husband’s hand and stare out the window, trying to ignore the smell of body odor emanating from members of a culture that has yet to discover deodorant.

We are en route to the LongJi rice terraces, about a three-hour bus ride from our hotel in Yangshuo. The tour guide explains in English that we will first visit the village of the native Yao people, who are famous for their women’s long hair (sometimes 2 meters long), and then take a local bus up the mountain to where we can hike around the terraces.

As we pull up and then alight from the bus, my eyes fall on a couple of small restaurants in the buildings before us. Then, piranha-like, they are upon us.

“Hello! Look!”

“Hello! Beautiful!”

“Hello! Cheap!”

The local people have spotted fresh meat, and there is no hesitation. We push our way past women in brightly colored woven clothing, trying to make our way to the entrance of a nearby swinging bridge without finding ourselves the sudden owners of postcards, weavings, and sundry other items these women are anxiously proffering.

Having gained the relative peace of the bridge, we cross the river and find ourselves in the Yao village. We follow the crowd of tourists into one of the log structures, and our guide explains that we are in the actual home of a Yao family who has agreed to open their home for tours. It’s a neat cultural experience; I mean, you could honestly believe you’re in a traditional Yao home if it weren’t for the giant basket full of plastic bottles on the top floor, or the NBA posters visible through the half-open door of a bedroom.

As the rest of the group files into a new-made-to-look-old building for the local show (“only 55 yuan!”), my husband, Ryan, and I wander on through the village. The streets wind up and down as much as side-to-side, but it takes maybe two minutes before we emerge at the other end of the village. The path continues on, however, so we do the same, following it until a side path looks more interesting and we end up on some large boulders at the edge of the river. Here we stop, and look back toward the village and up at the mountains.

Someone has left a dead snake on one of the rocks, and its three-foot long corpse basks in the sun as though it could still reap some benefit. Ryan goes over and kicks it into the river, but it holds my thoughts, because it bears similarity to the village I have just seen. Like the snake, this village once had true vitality; now it has a semblance of life. Amidst the bustle of tourism there is a forlornness to this place which it seems only my husband and I can feel; perhaps because we alone took the time to stop and truly look. Beneath the tourist façade, does this place still have a beating heart?

But the heart of a place is its people, and that is the core of our dissatisfaction here. This is a people who were once proud and hardy, a people who literally carved a living out of these rocky, steep mountains for 700 years. Now a woman in traditional dress and with her long hair tightly wound around her head laughs loudly as she waves a 100 Yuan bill in the face of her neighbor. A child finishes his ice cream bar and drops the wrapper in the street, just as he sees all the adults do. A man in an old wooden shed runs a stand selling ice cream, water, cigarettes, and beer; the last of which fills most of the shed, and scattered bottles around the village testify to its popularity. A man and his wife thrash rice as their people have for hundreds of years, but next to them looms a satellite dish.

What has happened to this people? Is modernization the problem? Tourism? Our guide explained to us that the Yao can’t grow enough rice to support themselves anymore, so the government subsidizes them. Why can’t they grow enough rice? Is it because all their time is spent catering to tourists?

In America going to “Colonial Williamsburg” doesn’t bother me. But see, Williamsburg is just a re-enactment: people putting on a show, then at night going home to their regular houses and lives. They are showing what the culture was, but there is no mistaking the fact that it’s pretend; a museum of sorts. Here you can taste what the culture should be, but it’s warped and sour; a caricature that tries to convince you it’s the real thing.

These people are no less tenacious than their ancestors, but now it’s directed into selling post cards instead of sculpting mountains. Thanks to the wonder of tourism, a part of their heritage and culture will always be preserved—but is it worth the cost?

5 comments:

iBo said...

this is the sort of thing that is happening all across China, and it's all America's fault. No, I'm just kidding. But really, globalization means the death of small town life like that. America too went through a phase where the local dialects and cultures and customs died out because of the media and homogenization, but now cultures have crossed so much that you can have white children of cowboys pretending to be black gangstas of LA.

In China where cultures and dialects are so different, TV and media is having a bit more of a dramatic effect. It's tragic, but that's the way the world is. The smaller the world becomes, the more traditional villages like that become fake.

Wow that's a great way to start off the day.

S.Morgan said...

Shan? You and Ivor, both well said. I believe Ivor is right? But how will these people live? Is it because their "hardiness" is gone? Isn't it interesting that when things are really hard and tough, we find a way. Good writing, Shan. So much detail, I was walking with you. Thank you.

Brad & Emily said...

Shan, your images were so nice in this. I used it in my sophomore English class the other day. Hope you don't mind. They like it too. :)

Chan said...

I always wonder what is right for places like the Yao village. I can't in good conscience say that they shouldn't be allowed all the technological conveniences that we "enjoy," but I also can't avoid recognizing the fact that those conveniences probably can't coexist with the quaint cultural practices that we visit the Yao village to see. I read some guy who said that culture shouldn't be an accumulation of rituals that, eventually, disconnect from their original purpose, but an expression of how a particular people deal with particular circumstances.

Chan said...

And while I think that globalization does mean the demise of the small town, like Ivor said, I don't believe in restricting globalization. While I personally may not agree with globalization, I think that restricting it would restrict the rights of the globalizers as well as the globalized. I mean, we get upset that the Yao people have lost their soul, but they're probably pretty stoked that they have TV and make way more money than before. It's a shame that we're losing so many regional cultures, dialects, etc, but both those cultures and dialects sprung up in response to an environment, and the distasteful culture Shan sees springing up in the Yao village is the same thing that created their old culture: their response to their environment, specifically the moneymaking possibilities presented by the traffic of thousands of annual tourists through their village. I dunno, it's tricky