The Influence of Confucianism and Western Psychological and Religious Culture on Identity and Music Learning among Chinese Musicians
thesis
posted on 2017-04-24, 02:00authored byAnnabella Sok Kuan Fung
During the 19th
century Western music was introduced to China. Chinese people have maintained a
passion for learning Western instruments which symbolises modernity, carries
class and religious implications, and serves as a cultural mandate into Western
culture. In collectivist Confucian societies, music education supports moral
cultivation, and arts immersion shapes the pupil’s character. In Western
individualistic culture, music learning primarily aims for personal enrichment
and skill acquisition. The Eastern Confucian virtue of self-perfection aligns
with Western self-actualisation recognised in Maslow’s hierarchy of needs. My
project investigated how the fusion of Confucianism and Western psychological
and religious culture influenced identity formation and music learning of diasporic
Chinese. Specifically, I explored how parenting beliefs, styles and practices
rooted in cultural norms shaped the development of musical thoughts,
behaviours, abilities, and identities of Chinese musicians.
Under phenomenological methodology, I employed three styles
of research writings to explore Chinese musicians’ lived experiences including
myself, a cultural insider and participant-researcher. My project recruited 49
musicians (18 included) from Australia, Hong Kong and the US of different
genders, ages, and career stages encompassing musicians’ life cycles, thus
enabling a fruitful discussion about their transitional changes. My
dissertation is a ‘Thesis with Published Works’ which comprises an exegesis, 10
linking articles, a discussion and conclusion. The articles include one
narrative inquiry, two autoethnographies, one shared autoethnography, and six
Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) studies. Data for the narrative
inquiry and autoethnographies used my self-reflections, complemented by my
diaries and artefacts. Data for the IPA studies were interview transcripts,
artefacts, email correspondences, my researcher journal and observation notes.
All participants were immersed in East-West influences from
birth, the fusions of diverse cultures influenced their achievements and
identities. Five overarching themes emerged: Confucianism, the umbilical cord;
tension between collectivism and individualism; impact of parental goals and
practices on children’s music learning; function and meaning of music in
musicians’ lives; and musicians’ natural inclination for self-perfection and
self-actualisation. Different cultural norms exerted sometimes conflicting
forces upon the participants’ development and shaped them to become who they are;
but their identities remain fluid.
The findings confirmed that a sociocultural psychology
approach to research in music education provided rich understandings of the
role of culture in shaping individuals’ music learning and identity.
Confucianism has many overlaps with Western psychological and religious
culture. It is a global philosophy that is readily transferable, applicable,
and comparable to Western culture; thus blurring the boundaries between east
and west, as well as dismissing the East-West dichotomy which does not consider
diverse cultures in terms of a continuum. Parents remain the most influential
figures in shaping their children’s cognitive, emotional, psychosocial,
spiritual, and musical development. Cultural diversity is at the forefront of
education and family studies; future research should consider family dynamics
including parent-child and sibling relationships and kin role modelling among
diverse racial and ethnic groups. Increasingly teachers across the globe have
students with hybrid cultural identities, so greater understandings of cultural
and musical underpinnings can assist the development of better teaching and
learning at all levels.