Chinese Folk Customs, Games, and Performing Arts
Chinese people love excitement, and Chinese New Year and other traditional festivals are times of special celebration and joy. Singing
and dancing are everywhere. In spite of the heavy influence of Western culture in the increasingly cosmopolitan Taiwan, the various customs and
activities accompanying traditional fests and celebrations are still observed with enthusiasm. Many of these folk customs and performances are
incorporated into the festival celebrations and competitions held on Chinese New Year and other festivals, and have been passed down from
generation to generation. The most common of these are perhaps the dragon dance and lion dance. Children growing up in Taiwan, even ones who have
not yet taken their first steps, have all seen one of these performances from their fathers' shoulders or on TV at home.
There are innumerable other kinds of festive folk performances, such as "riding in a boat on land," walking on stilts, "carrying a youth
piggyback," the clam spirit dance, and so forth.
In "carrying a youth piggyback," a young woman straps a head-to-waist wooden mannequin of an old person to the front of her body, giving the
appearance that an old person is carrying her piggyback. This portrayal of two persons by one is performed as a burlesque pantomime.
In the clam spirit dance, a young woman puts on a clam shell woven out of bamboo strips. In one sketch, the clam spirit opens and closes her
shell in response to fisherman casting and pulling in his net, but who each time gets nothing in return for his efforts. In another, a snipe
tries to peck out the clam's tasty flesh for a meal, but instead gets his beak stuck in the clamshell. This performance inevitably draws
side-splitting laughter and roaring applause from the audience.
Tip! Variety! Sometimes being a Mom can make you feel disconnected from the world around you.
Training martial arts keeps you stimulated.
Popular Chinese folk games that go back thousands of years, such as playing diabolo, kicking a shuttlecock, jumping rope, and spinning tops,
challenge and delight youngsters even today.
With encouragement and support from the government, games, stage shows, and customs such as these have been brought into the twentieth century
in the Taiwan today. Detailed information on their history, development, materials, technique, performance, and so forth, is widely available in
cultural centers, bookstores, and craft shops around the island in the form of home videos and books. Elementary school students often get to try
their hand at making some of the equipment used in these various folk arts themselves, under the guidance of an experienced teacher. in this way,
these ancient cultural treasures are kept vital and new, and a part of contemporary life, so that they may continue to enrich the lives of
China's people for generations to come.
Please visit www.chinatownconnection.com to learn more about Chinese Culture.
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