Traditional Chinese Corporations: Beyond Kinship

Emphasis on descent and kinship in analysis of traditional Chinese corporations, a legacy of structural-functional theory, mistakes the analyst's theoretical categories for native culture. In this paper, the author attempts to sort out some of the resulting conceptual muddles, and he proposes a...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of Asian studies 1984-05, Vol.43 (3), p.391-415
1. Verfasser: Sangren, P. Steven
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description Emphasis on descent and kinship in analysis of traditional Chinese corporations, a legacy of structural-functional theory, mistakes the analyst's theoretical categories for native culture. In this paper, the author attempts to sort out some of the resulting conceptual muddles, and he proposes a more rigorous analytical framework for discussing the range of organizational variation in traditional Chinese corporations. Analysis of ten representative cases from Ta-ch'i, Taiwan, reveals greater flexibility of corporate form and function than structural-functional theories would predict. Close attention to the cases also reveals the absence of any compelling reason to treat the “Chinese lineage” as analytically or culturally distinct from the entire range of Chinese formal associations (hui). To understand what is uniquely Chinese in Chinese corporations, past emphasis on differences in formal group-membership requirements must be complemented by attention to the cultural values and norms of operation that transcend such differences.
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subjects Anthropology
Asian history
China, People's Republic of
Chinese culture
Chinese history
Chinese languages
Corporate culture
Corporations
Councils
Cultural anthropology
Cultural groups
Culture
Deities
Education
Families & family life
Family names
Ideology
Interpersonal relations
Kinship
Marketing
Morocco
Political behavior
Social structure
Society
Villages
title Traditional Chinese Corporations: Beyond Kinship
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