Learning Morality with Siblings: The Untold Tale of a Mid-Twentieth Century Taiwanese Family

IF 0.6 0 ASIAN STUDIES
Jing Xu
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract This article uses a new theoretical and methodological framework to reconstruct a story of two children from fieldnotes collected by anthropologists Arthur and Margery Wolf in rural Taiwan (1958 to 1960). Through the case of a brother–sister dyad, it examines the moral life of young children and provides a rare glimpse into sibling relationship in peer and family contexts. First, combining social network analysis and NLP text-analytics, this article introduces a general picture of these siblings’ life in the peer community. Moreover, drawing from naturalistic observations and projective tests, it offers an ethnographic analysis of how children support each other and assert themselves. It emphasizes the role of child-to-child ties in moral learning, in contrast to the predominant focus of parent–child ties in the study of Chinese families. It challenges assumptions of the Chinese “child training” model and invites us to take children's moral psychology seriously and re-discover their agency.
与兄弟姐妹一起学习道德:一个二十世纪中期台湾家庭不为人知的故事
摘要本文采用一种新的理论和方法框架,从人类学家亚瑟和玛格丽·沃尔夫(1958年至1960年)在台湾农村收集的田野笔记中重建了一个两个孩子的故事。通过一个兄弟姐妹二人组的案例,它审视了幼儿的道德生活,并为我们提供了在同龄人和家庭背景下兄弟姐妹关系的罕见一瞥。首先,结合社交网络分析和NLP文本分析,本文介绍了这些兄弟姐妹在同龄人社区中的生活概况。此外,根据自然主义观察和投射测试,它对儿童如何相互支持和维护自己进行了人种学分析。它强调了儿童与儿童关系在道德学习中的作用,与中国家庭研究中主要关注的父母与儿童关系形成鲜明对比。它挑战了中国“儿童培训”模式的假设,并邀请我们认真对待儿童的道德心理,重新发现他们的能动性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
1.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
40
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