<tt id="6hsgl"><pre id="6hsgl"><pre id="6hsgl"></pre></pre></tt>
          <nav id="6hsgl"><th id="6hsgl"></th></nav>
          国产免费网站看v片元遮挡,一亚洲一区二区中文字幕,波多野结衣一区二区免费视频,天天色综网,久久综合给合久久狠狠狠,男人的天堂av一二三区,午夜福利看片在线观看,亚洲中文字幕在线无码一区二区
           
             
           
          Home > Travel
          An epic journey
          By Zhang Zixuan ( China Daily )
          Updated: 2012-03-14

          An epic journey

          Yang Zhengjiang collects and documents the King Yalu epic in western Guizhou province. Provided to China Daily

          An epic journey

          An ethnically Miao mans childhood exorcism leads him on a lifelong journey to chronicle the King Yalu epic. Zhang Zixuan reports in Beijing.

          Yang Zhengjiang could see the exorcists through chinks in the wall of the mill his family had locked him in. The 14-year-old ethnic Miao listened to their songs and peeked out at the mysterious rituals they were performing day and night to expel the evil that had confiscated his mind.

          Yang's mental illness had started in 1997, when he watched a classmate, who was also 14, get married in their remote village in Guizhou province. He vowed to write the greatest novel ever about this child bridegroom. As his behavior became increasingly erratic, his family locked him in the mill.

          "I'll never forget the darkness and dread of that mill," he says.

          Yang recovered over a month.

          "I can't explain why, but the songs brought me peace," he says.

          Yang has since become fascinated with the "dong lang", traditional Miao exorcists whom many members of the ethnic group believe can evict dark forces from the possessed. The dong lang, who are the most esteemed villagers, do so by chanting epic songs about the exploits of King Yalu, whom the Miao traditionally believe is their common ancestor.

          Legends of the dong lang have persisted for centuries in Guizhou province's long isolated and impoverished Mashan area. "I needed to know what they were singing about," Yang says. "This is very important to me."

          In 2002, at age 19, Yang enrolled in Guizhou Minzu University as a Chinese ethnic literature major. There he learned how to write the Miao language - it has no native written form - using the International Phonetic Alphabet.

          He was ready to head to the Mashan area he had feared as a child. Although he was raised in Mashan's Ziyun Miao and Bouyei autonomous county, he was scared by poverty he saw when he visited relatives.

          "My relatives' hunger scared me," he says.

          But to complete his mission of understanding the dong lang, Yang hiked through every village in Mashan's six counties and interviewed about 3,000 dong lang.

          "I knew I had found something important," Yang says.

          Their songs are fragments of the oral history surrounding the exploits of the Miao's legendary chieftain, King Yalu. The narrative arc focuses on how Yalu led his people to war and, after they were crushed, he brought them from the east to the Guizhou Plateau as refugees.

          The songs also chronicle the life stories of King Yalu's seven wives and his more than 100 sons. These tales continue to record the experiences of King Yalu's grandsons and great-grandsons, and all generations until today. "It's our Miao heroic epic," Yang says.

          The entire tale is only sung at funerals, he explains. Dong lang are invited to host the funerals and sing for days to tell the dead about their origins and what their families want to say to them.

          They wear bamboo hats and carry swords and bows. Their chants and movements must match every step of the funerary ceremony. "Traditional Miao funerals still include the horse-chopping ceremony," 67-year-old dong lang Chen Xinghua says. "The tribe migrated here on horseback. So the souls of the deceased can return home faster if their family kills a horse for the soul to ride."

          During major festivals, disasters and illnesses, dong lang will sing about King Yalu's birth but not the whole epic, Yang says.

          This was the part sung to Yang during his teenage exorcism. Yang believed his new knowledge came with responsibility.

          He worked for a local culture bureau after graduation and continued to collect and document the King Yalu epic. By 2009, he had walked through western Guizhou's 10 counties and recorded dong lang songs via visual, audio and written media.

          But the 29-year-old says ensuring accuracy requires an unimaginable amount of work. The Miao language is divided into three major dialect families based on geography - eastern, central and western - each of which is subdivided into several even more localized dialects.

          The Mashan dialect is one of four subdivisions of the western group and has 12 tones.

          And the local dialects' sounds change when sung compared to when spoken. In addition, the songs reference hundreds of ancient places that have vanished and require years of research to know about and, sometimes, to prove they even existed.

          "Doing this made me feel like I was going insane again, like when I was 14," Yang says, with a bitter smile. "Sometimes, the answers would come to me in my dreams, and I'd awake with a start."

          Yang says interpreting the Miao language into Chinese is an "extreme" process and he locks himself in total isolation to work.

          "You need to enter that specific context and devoutly listen to it," Yang explains. "That's the only way you can interpret the original meaning."

          But many requests from the outside world often interrupt Yang's work. The local government has asked him for written materials to provide the travel industry. Yang's relatives criticize him for being "superstitious".

          "Sometimes I feel like I'm dying," Yang says. "Sometimes I feel like I'm already dead."

          He says he often cries when he's alone on the mountain and has considered giving up countless times.

          "But these are the last dong lang," Yang says. "Their average age has reached 60, and their memories have started blurring. Tomorrow, no one will be able to host their funerals, and the Miao's history will be forgotten."

          To Yang's delight, the King Yalu epic was included on the State-level Intangible Cultural Heritage list. Its first volume was published last month in Beijing, with assistance from the Chinese Folk Literature and Art Society.

          Yang wore the traditional Miao clothing his 64-year-old mother made him when he walked into the Great Hall of the People for the first time. Such a refined outfit is reserved for the dead in Yang's impoverished village.

          Executive editor-in-chief of the volume, Yu Weiren, praises Yang's contributions.

          "Yang is a dreamer from the generation born after 1980, but he doesn't live on dreams," Yu says. "His difficult and lonely journey to collect the epic has earned him a spot among great academics. I hope he can devote his life to preserving Miao culture."

          Chinese Folk Literature and Art Society chairman Feng Jicai says: "It's vital to ethnic culture's preservation that researchers like Yang come from the ethnicities they research."

          Three other researchers have teamed up with Yang. They plan to publish volume 2 about Yalu's sons, volume 3 about his later descendents and volume 4 about the king's conversations with nature in the next eight years.

          Documentation will continue in central and eastern Guizhou after the work in the province's western swath is finished.

          Yang remains mystified as to what cured his mental illness when he was young - whether it was the singing, and if so, if it was just the psychological comfort it provided.

          But he's certain about one thing:"The epic is the Miao's religion. It has its own power."

           
           
            Video
          Ancient paper-making techniques still alive in Guizhou
          Planes, trains & automobiles in Guizhou
          Colorful Guizhou
           
           
           
          主站蜘蛛池模板: 风韵丰满熟妇啪啪区老老熟妇| 男女做aj视频免费的网站| 国产乱妇乱子视频在播放| 成年女人喷潮免费视频| 久久久久亚洲AV无码专| 国产系列高清精品第一页| 2022最新国产在线不卡a| 亚洲精品久综合蜜| 白丝乳交内射一二三区| 国产精品亚洲av三区色| 中文人成影院| 国产精品乱码久久久久久小说| 国产精品丝袜亚洲熟女| 国产二区三区不卡免费| 亚洲一区二区在线无码| 69天堂人成无码免费视频| 久久亚洲精品国产精品| 亚洲综合久久一本伊一区| 黑人巨大精品oideo| 国产玖玖视频| 狠狠综合久久av一区二| 欧美大胆老熟妇乱子伦视频 | 色综合色国产热无码一| 欧美高清狂热视频60一70| 67194熟妇在线观看线路| 国产91在线|中文| 久久精品夜色国产亚洲av| 蜜桃无码一区二区三区| 丝袜美女被出水视频一区| 亚洲男人电影天堂无码| 色窝窝免费播放视频在线| 久久99久久99精品免视看国产成人| 国产三级精品三级在线专区1| 免费成人网一区二区天堂| 国产不卡一区二区精品| 国产人成77777视频网站| 亚洲精品视频一二三四区| 国产精品一品二区三四区| 亚洲精品国产字幕久久麻豆| 无码无套少妇毛多18pxxxx| 99久久精品看国产一区|