The Farmhouse Joy (nongjiale) Movement in China's Ethnic Minority Villages

  • Xu Wu*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

20 Scopus citations

Abstract

In China, establishments known as 'Farmhouse Joy restaurants' (nongjiale) which originally emerged around the suburbs of big cities and were associated with the foodstuffs of ethnic majority Han Chinese farmers, have now, as a result of a variety of development projects and local initiatives, emerged in ethnic minority and other remote villages located deep in the mountains. Based on ethnographic fieldwork in villages in Hubei and Yunnan provinces, this study examines how a new conception of 'original ecology' has played a dynamic role in the transformation of these nongjiale in ethnic and remote areas. This transformation results from a new symbolic synthesis and rapprochement between what are commonly understood to be 'farmers' foods', desires to experience an original ecology and understandings of ethnicity in China, a synthetic construction clearly aimed at attracting urbanite consumption. Important differences have emerged between villages participating in this process of synthesis. Those villages with strong claims to ethnic minority status have to carefully convert what are in fact ethnic foods into what are seen as ethnically unmarked 'farmers' foods' in their nongjiale, while villages without such ethnic backgrounds paradoxically have to construct artificial ethnic symbols by mechanisms of imitation or pretence.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)158-177
Number of pages20
JournalAsia Pacific Journal of Anthropology
Volume15
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 2014

Keywords

  • Consumption
  • Food
  • Minority Ethnicity
  • Original Ecology
  • Rurality
  • Tourism

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