At the mention of Spring Festival, older Chinese may think of
red lanterns, long clusters of firecrackers, freshly steamed
dumplings and long-anticipated new clothes.
But to the younger generation, many things have changed.
Televised evening losing its lure.
Wu Jing decided not to return to his hometown in the eastern
province of Jiangxi due to the heavy snow that cut traffic.
"I can't watch the televised evening show on CCTV with my
parents, but there's nothing to regret," said the 26-year-old
white-collar worker. "I have booked a room in the KTV with several
friends. It is much better than watching the boring evening
programs."
Since 1982, the annual Lunar New Year show on CCTV has been a
main course on Spring Festival eve. People would sit before the
television, which in those days was only black-and-white, from 8
p.m. until the bells tolled for the new year.
However, with higher living standards and more entertainment
choices, the traditional show has seen its audience slowly erode,
although it still has a viewership most Western tv programs would
envy. In 2005, 2006 and 2007, the rates stood at 95.5 percent, 94.3
percent and 93.6 percent.
Earlier this year, five scholars made an online "new Spring
Festival declaration" against the televised evening, denouncing it
as a "fake folk-custom" and advocating cultural diversity.
"I am not that radical," Wu said. "There are still people like
my parents expecting to watch the evening programs. But to young
people like us, it is no longer a main course." The post-1980s
generation does New Year's eve
Luo Ziwei and his wife were both born after 1980, when the
single-child policy was implemented in China. The couple planned to
eat in a restaurant with their parents.
"Traditionally, Spring Festival is an occasion when families
reunited at home," he said, "but whether eating at my home or hers,
the parents of one of us would be left alone."
As the post-1980s generation gets to the age of marriage, more
young people are facing the same problem as Luo and making the same
choice.
"With the change of population structure, the number of
pyramid-shaped families is on the rise," Wang Zhongwu, sociology
professor at Shandong University said.
"New ways to celebrate the Spring Festival eve are practical and
good for sharing the so-called 'love and care resource'," he said.
"Eating out instead of at home is also a signal of people's
improving living condition and pursuit of higher living quality,"
he added.
Statistics from the trade and service bureau in Jinan,
Shandong's capital, showed that hotels in the city above three
stars had 80 percent of their seats for Spring Festival eve dinners
booked out a month ago. An estimated 700,000 people in the city of
6 million will have their Lunar New Year dinner away from home.
Prices of Spring Festival eve dinners rose 10 percent to 15
percent compared with last year, boosting the per person charge to
80 yuan (about 11 U.S. dollar) to 150 yuan. Migrant workers'
holiday away from home
Chen Mingjue from the northwestern province of Shaanxi has been
a migrant worker in the coastal city of Qingdao, in Shandong, since
1994. During those 14 years, he celebrated Spring Festival at home
just twice.
"At first, my parents longed for my return home and nagged me
every day when the Lunar New Year was drawing near," he recalled.
"But now, they have gotten used to my absence. They came to realize
that my returning home at this peak season might mean losing a
job."
With China's reform and opening-up that began in the late 1970s,
more one-time farmers flooded into cities to work. According to the
National Statistics Bureau, 130 million people, or one-tenth of
China's population, moved from the countryside to the cities from
1978 to 2000.
"Although I am not a permanent resident in the city, I feel that
I am a member of the Qingdao community," he said.
Chen bought a mobile phone for his father two years ago. "Now
that he learned to send text messages, we can keep in touch from
time to time," said the man proudly.
"Migrant workers' staying in cities during Spring Festival is a
natural trend of China's social transformation, although the
majority still chose to go home," said professor Wang. "Such change
is a requirement of China's modernization," he said. "China
wouldn't have seen such drastic changes had all migrant workers
been reluctant to leave home in the first place."
"Changing Spring Festival folk customs reflect social
development," said Chen Tongming, deputy director with the Academy
of Social Sciences of Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region. "People have
more money in their pockets. Therefore, new clothes and luxurious
dinners are no longer connected with the Spring Festival."
Meanwhile, he said, "with the diversification of social
development, the significance of the Spring Festival is waning. To
many people, especially youngsters, it is more of a 'golden week'
for rest and fun." Enditem
(Xinhua News Agency February 8, 2008)