@article{oai:minpaku.repo.nii.ac.jp:00004171, author = {韓, 景旭 and Han, Jingxu}, issue = {3}, journal = {国立民族学博物館研究報告, Bulletin of the National Museum of Ethnology}, month = {Mar}, note = {The purpose of this research is to clarify the present everyday lives of the people of Xinghuo Village, North-East region of China. In undertaking this research, the writer spent a total of nine months in the field on five separate visits between July 1992 and September 1994. There are currently approximately two million Korean-Chinese living in China. However, not withstanding the Japanese occupation of the Korean peninsula and the North-East regions of China, there has been little anthropological research by foreigners on this group. As is common knowledge, cultural anthropologists have long searched out distant ethnic groups, especially those isolated from modern civilization, looking for their own romantic/ideal past, as though primitive civilization had continued among them. For this reason, those minority groups which have not been seen as so distanced from "civilization", such as the Korean-Chinese, have often been avoided in research. Due to this anthropological tradition, not only foreign researchers but also Chinese folk scholars and sociologists are comparatively behind in their research of the Korean-Chinese in comparison to that of other ethnic groups. From 1940 until 1950, with Chinese foreign and civil wars, and from 1960 through 1970, with the complicated political climate in China, there was a long difficult period for foreign scholars conducting research. However, from the beginning of 1980, with Yunnan province as the focal point, research on various ethnic minorities of the southern regions of China and Tibet has prospered. In this new climate, one wonders why research on a people with a population of two million has not progressed. Amongst the fifty-six ethnic groups in China, Koreans enjoy the highest rate of literacy and education. It is as though because Koreans possess clearly different qualities from "primitive people", research on Koreans has not been that attractive. In addition it is as though the interest shown by many Korean researchers in such Korean traditions as ancestor festivals and the Yangban culture has tacitly been taken to include all Koreans, even though no surveys have been conducted on Korean society in China. In any case, from now on Korean society in China should be an object of sociological and anthropological survey and research. Based on the current state of research on Koreans indicated above, this study examines the various social changes and adaptions inland Korean-Chinese have experienced as an immigrant minority that has mixed with a variety of ethnic groups, such as the Chinese among others.}, pages = {569--634}, title = {中国朝鮮族にみる村の生活 : 吉林省星火村の調査報告}, volume = {21}, year = {1997}, yomi = {カン, ケイキョク} }