Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 February 2009
When one becomes an official, the entire family prospers … they host banquets and send presents (ch'ing-k'o sung-li). … One can see no organization. Personal acquaintances (ssu-jen) are employed, factions are active, and there are feudal relationships (kuan-hsi) …
Why were the big and small “fleets” [of Lin Piao's anti-party group] openly able to carry out the schemes of forming cliques, engaging in factionalism, and carrying out conspiracies by such acts as hosting banquets (ch'ing-k'o), sending gifts (sung-li), offering official positions and making promises?
In addition to providing himself with extravagant pleasures, Wang Hungwen used the illegally obtained money and goods to host banquets (ch'ing-k'o), and send presents (sung-li) in order to recruit corrupt cadres and conduct anti-party factional activities. So many filthy political exchanges are just so happily arranged in an atmosphere of wine and women. Eat, Eat, Drink, Drink had already become a gauge by which Wang Hung-wen and his “little brothers” measured political relationships (kuan-hsi).
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18. Matsu is a pseudonym for the township in honour of the goddess much beloved by the residents of the field site and the people of Taiwan in general.
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22. In the discussion below I have attempted to show when political alliances based on particularistic ties can become issue-oriented.
23. I have used the Chinese term kuan-hsi in this article for three reasons. First, I wish to emphasise the analysis pertains to Chinese particularistic ties and not to particularistic ties in general. Secondly, the most accurate translation, “Chinese particularistic ties,” is quite awkward. Thirdly, non-speakers of Chinese have indicated that such simpler English translations as “relationship” and “connection” confuse more than they enlighten owing to a lack of equivalency between languages.
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26. Chinese sometimes indicate this flexibility by distinguishing between a broader concept of native place (ta t'ung-hsiang) such as the whole of Fukien Province and a narrower concept (hsiao t'ung-hsiang) such as southern Fukien.
27. For specific voting data, see Jacobs, “Local,” Chs. vi and vii.
28. Mother's brother (chiu-chiu; Hokkien: a-ku), a very important relationship; in the Chinese kinship system.
29. This division follows Matsu practice where most people clearly distinguish, agnatic kin (ch'in-t'ang; Hokkien: chin-tong) from affinal kin (ch'in-ch'i; Hokkien: chin-chiek). On occasion one can hear Matsu residents use the term ch'in-ch'i to include both agnates and affines and a few people say this usage is correct. Most Matsu informants, however, insist the term ch'in-ch'i does not include agnates.
30. Patrilocality generally assures limitation to one village. Ethnographers have reported lineage branches forming in neighbouring villages, but this atypical pattern did not occur in Matsu Township with one possible exception: the Chin of one village had the same origin as the Chin who dominated an adjacent single-surname village, but no kinship, political, social, or religious consequences flowed from this fact.
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44. Same-surname can be an exception, but, as noted above, the same-surname base is not important in Matsu.
45. In Matsu the Party secretary, police chief and some school principals are Mainlanders though some principals, full-time party cadres and policemen are Taiwanese. The Township Party Committee consists of native Matsu political leaders as does, of course, the leadership of the Public Office, the Farmers' Association and the Township Assembly.
46. The party deliberately attempts to assign professional party cadres to areas where they have no kuan-hsi. Like the Imperial Chinese “rule of avoidance,” party cadres are not supposed to be assigned to their home areas. Another party policy reminiscent of Imperial China is the periodic reassignment of party cadres. Both of these party cadre assignment policies are designed to prevent the development of close kuan-hsi between the cadre and local leaders and thus to make the cadre responsive to the party organization instead of local interests. (The Imperial Chinese policies of assigning officials had the same objective.)
47. Thus, the phenomenon of public kuan-hsi resembles the “family circles” or “family groups” reported in the Soviet polity.
48. The term “public kuan-hsi” had a different meaning in Taiwan during the Japanese period (1895–1945). According to informants, it meant a willingness to be active in public affairs, such as a willingness to serve as village head, help the poor, donate land for a school or cemetery, etc.
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