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Be a Sedentary Confucian Gentlemen: The Construction of Anti-Physical Culture by Chinese Dynasts using Confucianism and the Civil Service Examination Cover

Be a Sedentary Confucian Gentlemen: The Construction of Anti-Physical Culture by Chinese Dynasts using Confucianism and the Civil Service Examination

By: Junwei Yu  
Open Access
|Jun 2011

Abstract

Although there has been a growing body of research that explores Chinese masculinities within imperial China, the connection between masculinity and physical culture has been neglected. In this article, the author argues that Chinese emperors used Confucianism and the civil service examination (keju) to rule the country, and at the same time, created a social group of sedentary gentlemen whose studiousness and bookishness were worshiped by the public. In particular, the political institution of keju played a crucial role in disciplining the body. Behavior that did not conform to the Confucian standards which stressed civility and education were considered barbaric. As a result, a wen-version of masculinity was constructed. In other words, an anti-physical culture that strengthened the gross contempt towards those who chose to engage in physical labor.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/v10141-011-0004-x | Journal eISSN: 1899-4849 | Journal ISSN: 2081-2221
Language: English
Page range: 80 - 90
Published on: Jun 21, 2011
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: Volume open

© 2011 Junwei Yu, published by Józef Piłsudski University of Physical Education in Warsaw
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons License.

Volume 51 (2011): Issue 1 (June 2011)