The Hanfu Movement (), also known as the Hanfu Revival Movement (), is a homegrown, grassroots cultural movement in Mainland China seeking to revive or revitalize Han Chinese fashion, aesthetics and cultural identity via public wearing of pre-Qing dynasty traditional ethnic clothing of the Han Chinese, i.e. hanfu. The movement began as a subculture of nostalgic pastime among elegance-seeking, historically conscious , and has since evolved into a trendy nationwide movement boasting a new clothing industry with millions of young fashion-conscious consumers.[China’s ancient hanfu: a visual guide to the clothing’s history and revival (scmp.com)] It has also slowly gained traction amongst the Chinese diaspora, especially in countries like Singapore.
The Hanfu movement started in 2003, and its emergence can be credited to Zhang Congxing, a Singaporean Chinese who wrote an article about Wang Letian, a man from Zhengzhou who was photographed dressed in a homemade shenyi, a type of robe often worn as Confucian academic dress. This spurred online discussion and spontaneous acts of imitation, culminating in the formation of a rapid-growing organic movement. Its ready adoption by trendy fashion-conscious young women has been accelerated by social media, which then were predominantly , has helped to propagate the trend via photo sharing, Chinese clothing fashion design comparisons, , and historical and philosophical discussions. Later online platforms such as Bilibili, Instagram and Douyin have further contributed to its resurgence by allowing youth to showcase and easily share their and experience. The popular clothing styles are typically ceremonial dress worn by royalty and Chinese nobility, and soldiers, although there have been calls to promote more ' clothing that are more compatible with work, sports and modern daily life.
The popularity of the movement, especially among Gen Y and Gen Z, can be attributed to a burgeoning national pride associated with the rise of China as an economic, technological and military powerhouse in the world stage, to draw historical sustenance and justification for national rejuvenation, and to express subtle support for Han nationalism and discontent against affirmative action and Liangshaoyikuan favoring ethnic minorities (which Han nationalists viewed as a form of reverse discrimination).[《凭栏观史》第34期:中国到底有没有大汉族主义 "Viewing] Additionally, the aesthetics of traditional Han garments is considered a more authentic representation of Chinese culture and history than the cheongsam and tangzhuang then-promoted by the Chinese Ministry of Culture and the Chinese television industry, as those are Manchu-influenced clothings that are considered historical products of violent forced assimilation during the 17th century conquest by the Qing dynasty and are often also seen as being associated with the century of humiliation. It can also be seen as a nationalistic salute to the Chinese Dream by paying homage to past of Pax Sinica, when Chinese culture, aesthetics and philosophy had significant influences over Sinosphere.
File:Schoolgirls wearing Tang-style "Qixiong ruqun".jpg|School pupils in Hanfu
File:雁塔 大唐不夜城的穿唐代服饰者 01.jpg|Night wear of Hanfu
File:Han clothing Hanfu movement.jpg|Hanfu street fashion
File:Chinese man wearing Hanfu in Wikimania 2013.jpg|Male in Hanfu
Aesthetic Value
The desire to reconnect with one's cultural heritage has not been the only driver of the movement. Hanfu's classical elegance and unique aesthetic, and the ease with which one can produce flattering photos for social media by wearing it, continue to drive the movement's popularity.
Women have also been the principal drivers of the Hanfu movement by emphasizing its fashionable aspect. According to the iMedia 2018 survey, women make up 88.2% of the Hanfu enthusiasts and 75.8% of the Hanfu stores on Taobao and Tmall only sell hanfu for women.
Cultural significance, ethical-ritual aspects, and social value
Chinese culture accords great significance to ritual and the power of symbols. The key design elements of Hanfu are no exception. In the ritual tradition originating in the Zhou dynasty:
-
The left collar covering the right represents the perfection of human nature through culture and the overcoming of instinct and bodily forces by the spiritual power of ethical and ritual teaching;
-
The expansive cutting and board sleeve represents the concord or harmony between nature and human creative power.
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The use of the girdle to fasten the garment over the body represents the constraints of Han culture to limit human desire, which would otherwise lead to the commission of immoral acts
Proponents of the movement emphasize the symbolic value of Hanfu and the ethical and ritual significance of its all its aspects.
They also note that China, in the face of rising prosperity and modern social pressures, an increasing need to fashion a sense of national identity..On this view, the Hanfu Movement is a natural and intrinsic part of the Chinese Dream - "the Great Rejuvenation of the Chinese Nation" and seeks to recover lost cultural heritage as well as to promote traditional Chinese culture.
Definition of hanfu
Classical usage of the word "Hanfu" and historical records
According to
Dictionary of Old Chinese Clothing (中國衣冠服飾大辭典), the term
hanfu literally means "Clothing of the Han People."
This term, which is not commonly used in ancient times, can be found in some historical records from
Han dynasty,
Tang dynasty,
Song dynasty, Ming, Qing dynasties and the Republican era in China.
[《宋史》:“吾家世為王民,自金人犯邊,吾兄弟不能以死報國,避難入關,今為曦所逐,吾不忍棄漢衣冠,願死於此,為趙氏鬼。”]
Modern expert opinion
Chinese researcher Hua Mei (華梅), interviewed by student advocates of the Hanfu Movement in 2007, recognizes that defining hanfu is no simple matter, as there was no uniform style of Chinese fashion throughout the millennia of its history. Because of its constant evolution, she questions which period's style can rightly be regarded as traditional. Nonetheless, she explains that hanfu has historically been used to broadly refer to indigenous Chinese clothing in general. Observing that the apparel most often promoted by the movement are based on the Han-era quju and zhiju, she suggests that other styles, especially that of the Tang dynasty, would also be candidates for revival in light of this umbrella definition.
Zhou Xing (周星), cultural anthropologist and professor at Aichi University, states that the term hanfu was not commonly used in ancient times and referred to some of the costumes worn by Hanfu Movement participants as being historically inaccurate because they contain modern design elements. Like Hua, he noted that the term hanfu classically referred to the clothing worn by Han people in general, but he argued that there are differences between historical hanfu and the contemporary hanfu introduced by some participants of the movement.
Consensus view and popular opinion
On March 8, 2021, the magazine Vogue published an article on modern hanfu defining it as a "type of dress from any era when Han Chinese ruled".
Enthusiasts in the Hanfu movement have reached their own consensus as to what would qualify as Hanfu. These include a wide and loose style of cross-collar garments with the right lapel covering the left, the use of a flat cutting, and the employment of belts and lace as closures in place of buttons. They acknowledge that the hanfu costumes in some photo studios, movies, and TV dramas are not authentic representations of ancient hanfu, but contemporary hanfu modified based on ancient hanfu for the purposes of visual effects, cost saving and convenience of wearing.
Movement Timeline
Precursors
There were numerous attempts to reintroduce Han Chinese clothing immediately after the fall of the Qing and in the revolutionary period.
After the Qing was toppled in the 1911 Xinhai Revolution, the Taoist dress and topknot was adopted by the ordinary gentry and "Society for Restoring Ancient Ways" (復古會) on the Sichuan and Hubei border where the White Lotus and Gelaohui operated.
Traditional Han Chinese dress was also employed by the short-reigning Hongxian Emperor, former President Yuan Shikai, during his coronation ceremony in 1915.
2000s
First seeds
Journalists and scholars agree that the modern Hanfu Movement begun around 2003.
In November 2003, Wang Letian from
Zhengzhou, China, wore in public a homemade
shenyi (a kind of Hanfu),
thus catching the attention of Singaporean-Chinese journalist Zhang Congxing, who then decided to write an article on him which was published on the
Lianhe Zaobao, a Singapore newspaper.
This inspired others to reflect on the cultural identity of Han Chinese and to initiate the Hanfu movement as part of a broader effort to stimulate a cultural renaissance.[ "Han follow suit in cultural renaissance", Asian Times Online] Adoption was rapid - in the same year, people started wearing hanfu in public, forming communities of Hanfu enthusiasts and organizing activities related to hanfu and other elements of traditional Chinese culture. The movement had significant online support. Proponents of Hanfu launched the website Hanwang (漢網) to promote "traditional Han clothing".
Practical difficulties
In the early years of the Hanfu Movement, there were no existing stores from which to purchase hanfu. The first manufacturers and sellers of Hanfu were the early Hanfu enthusiasts who possessed the necessary skills to DIY hanfu by themselves.
They made hanfu in small quantities, and mainly relied on hanfu forums and enthusiasts communities to advertise their products.
Around the year 2005, the first online hanfu store appeared.
Since then, more and more hanfu stores emerged both online and offline. In 2006, the first physical hanfu store was opened under the trademark
Chong Hui Han Tang (重回漢唐)
, which literally means "Coming back to the Han and Tang Dynasties" in
Chengdu,
Sichuan of China.
From the year 2007, various hanfu-related clubs started to appear. These clubs focused on to organizing offline social activities in the instead of being largely online based.
Other difficulties were psychological and included shyness. Many users reported having first to overcome the fear of social derision before daring to wear Hanfu in public.
Politics
In 2007, a member of the CPPCC, Ye Hongming, proposed to define Hanfu as the national uniform.
In the same year, a proposal to change the current western style academic dress to hanfu style was also made by Liu Minghua, a deputy of the National People's congress.
In February 2007, advocates of hanfu submitted a proposal to the Chinese Olympic Committee to have it be the official clothing of the Chinese team in the 2008 Summer Olympics.
[ "Submission for a Proposal on hanfu dress for the 2008 Chinese Olympics to the China Olympics Committee" , Phoenix TV ] However, the Chinese Olympic Committee rejected the proposal in April 2007.
[ 官方首次表态北京奥运礼服不用汉服 ]
2010s
Culture shows and penetration into the mainstream
In 2013, the first Xitang Hanfu Culture Week was held in the city of Xitang, Zhejiang. Since then, it has been held successfully in subsequent years and is continue to be held annually. In 2014, a project called Travelling with Hanfu was launched through the collaboration between Chinese photographer and freelancer Dang Xiaoshi, and Chinese actor Xu Jiao. Together, they posted series of photos online which quickly attracted many public attention.
Market growth
In 2018, it was estimated that the hanfu market consisted of 2 million potential consumers. The estimated revenue sales for 2019 was 1.4 billion yuan ($199.3 million).
In 2019, it was estimated that there were 1,188 online hanfu stores on Tmall and Taobao which shows an increase of 45.77% over the previous year. The hanfu stores Chong Hui Han Tang ranked third on Tmall in 2019 after the hanfu store Hanshang Hualian and Shisanyu. In the 2019 edition of the Xitang Hanfu Culture Week, it was estimated that it attracted 40,000 Hanfu enthusiast participants.
2020s
Continued growth
By 2020, according to a study done by Forward Industry Research Institute (a Chinese research institute), the number of hanfu enthusiasts in China has reached 5.163 million, creating a market size equivalent to 6.36 billion yuan (US$980 million), a proportional increase of over 40% compared to the previous year.
In 2021, a lawmaker named Cheng Xinxiang submitted a proposal for a National Hanfu Day. This would take place on the Double Third Festival, or the third day of the third month on the Chinese calendar. Meanwhile, it is projected that by the end of 2021, the total number of hanfu enthusiasts across China will exceed 7 million, and that the market size of hanfu will exceed nine billion yuan (US$1.39 billion).
Historical background and context
Han clothing before the Qing conquest
The traditional form of Han Chinese clothing changed drastically during the Manchu-led Qing dynasty. When the Manchus established the Qing dynasty, there were three Manchu cultural impositions which were placed upon the Han people: the queue hairstyle which was universally and strictly implemented, the wearing of Manchu-style clothing in official dress and the learning of Manchu language. Although the implementation of the latter two was more limited in both scope, traditional features of Han Chinese attire, found in all earlier dynasties, disappeared nearly completely from public life.
File:Figures in a cortege, tomb of Li Xian, Tang Dynasty.jpg|Tang dynasty military attire
File:儒巾_五百罗汉像轴之一_南宋_周季常日本大德寺藏.png|Song dynasty scholars.
File:Court Ladies of the Tang.jpg|Tang dynasty court ladies
File:Portrait of Jiang Shunfu.jpg|Ming dynasty official dress
File:Mingbeizi2_hanfu.jpg|Ming dynasty man scholar.
File:Portrait assis de l'empereur Ming Xianzong.jpg|Ming dynasty imperial dress
File:China's Ming Dynasty Empress Xiaoan.JPG|Ming dynasty imperial dress
File:Daao3.jpg|Ming dynasty noble women.
Against this context, the Hanfu movement is a grassroots movement which seeks to restore the dress and attire and to recover the aesthetic sensibilities of Han Chinese dress from previous eras recognized as high points for Han culture - principally the Ming, Tang, Song and Han. It seeks to popularize
hanfu as fashionable daily wear, and to integrate traditional Han elements into the design of modern clothing.
There is also a clear social and communal aspect to the movement. Participants and supporters of the Hanfu Movement call one another
tongpao ();
a term, which comes from the :
The term tongpao is literally translated as "wearing the same style of robe" and is also a pun of tongbao () meaning "fellow compatriots".
Chinese clothing and hairstyle during Manchu rule
The Tifayifu policy
Upon establishing the Qing dynasty, the Manchu authorities also issued a decree known as
Tifayifu (剃髮易服, ), forcing all male citizens to adopt Manchu hairstyle by shaving their hair on the front of the head and braiding the hair on the back of the head into pigtails known as queue (辮子), as well as to adopt Manchu clothing such as
changshan (長衫). Those who violated the Tifayifu policy were heavy punished, sometimes with death. This policy caused significant discontentment among other ethnicities, including the Han Chinese, and provoked numerous uprisings across the country. However, those uprisings were violently suppressed.
Qing Manchu prince Dorgon initially canceled the order to shave for all men in Ming territories south of the Great wall (post 1644 additions to the Qing). Ironically, it was Han officials from Shandong, Sun Zhixie and Li Ruolin who, in obsequious displays of loyalty to the new political order, had voluntarily shaved their foreheads and then demanded Qing Prince Dorgon impose the queue hairstyle on the entire population.
Exemptions - women, children and clergy
Certain groups of people were exempted from the Tifayifu, including women, children, and clerics. Throughout the
Qing dynasty, Han Chinese women continued to wear the styles of clothing from the
Ming dynasty.
[.] Neither Taoist priests nor Buddhist monks were required to wear the queue by the Qing or to change their attire. They continued to wear their traditional hairstyles: completely shaved heads for Buddhist monks, and long hair bound in the traditional Chinese topknot for Taoist priests.
Their garments were unchanged.
Taoist priests continued to wear Taoist traditional dress (a style of hanfu called "
daopao").
Impact on male non-Han subjects
The policy had precedent. The Qing imposed the shaved head hairstyle on men of all ethnicities under its rule even before 1644 like upon the
Nanai people in the 1630s who had to shave their foreheads.
The men of certain ethnicities who came under Qing rule later like
Salar people and
Uyghur people already shaved all their heads bald so the shaving order was redundant.
However, the shaving policy was not enforced in the
Tusi autonomous chiefdoms in Southwestern China where many minorities lived, and on one Han Chinese Tusi, the Chiefdom of Kokang populated by Han
Kokang people.
Resistance to the Tifayifu
From the earliest years, the Tifayifu policy was encountered with strong objection from the Han Chinese, whose hairstyle and clothing had remained mostly unchanged for over thousands of years. The hair was regarded as an integral part of the body - a gift from parents, and cutting it unnecessarily was seen as contrary to filial piety. The Qing government implemented the Tifayifu policy on Han Chinese people with increased pressure, leading to conflicts and massacres. It was not until early 20th century when the democratic revolutionaries repudiated the queue, calling it backward, and advocating short hairstyles for men.
Early resistance to Manchu impositions
During the final years of Ming, General
Koxinga criticized the Qing hairstyle by referring to the shaven pate looking like a fly.
Qing demanded Zheng Chenggong and his men to abide to the Tifayifu policy in exchange for recognizing Zheng Chenggong as a feudatory. However, Zheng Chenggong refused to surrender.
The Qing also demanded that
Zheng Jing and his men on Taiwan shave in order to receive recognition as a fiefdom. However, Zheng Jing's men and Ming prince
Zhu Shugui fiercely objected to the shaving and adopting Manchu clothing, thus also refused to surrender.
Uprisings against Tifayifu
The Manchu rulers made the Tifayifu policy increasingly strict over the early years of the Qing dynasty, requiring all male citizens to not only wear a queue, but also to shave their forehead. This was encountered with greater opposition from the Han Chinese than the queue. From thence on, Han rebels including those involved in the Taiping Rebellion grew hair on the front of their heads as a symbol of their rebellion against the Qing even while retaining the queue. The Taiping rebels forced everybody in their territory to grow out their hair, which in turn was disliked by many people who had, by then, grown accustomed to shaving their foreheads. Both the Qing forces and the rebels killed people for having the 'wrong' hairstyle, as hairstyle was seen as an indicator of political affilitiation.
Qing's compromise
In an attempt to alleviate the public discontentment toward Tifayifu policy, the Qing government eventually decided to adopt a series of compromise policies.
This series of compromise policies, referred as the (c=十从十不从; ), were advocated by Jin Zhijun, a minister of the Ming dynasty who had surrendered to the Qing dynasty:
the clothing of living men, government officials, Confucian scholars, and prostitutes had to follow the Manchu tradition;
while women, children, deceased men, slaves, Taoist and Buddhist monks, theatrical actors were allowed to maintain Hanfu and maintain their customs.
Furthermore, with the consent of the Qing government, traditional Ming dynasty Hanfu robes given by the Ming Emperors to the Chinese noble Duke Yansheng descended from Confucius were preserved in the Confucius Mansion alongside robes from the Qing emperors. This compromise mirrored that of the Jurchens in the Jin dynasty and the Mongols in the Yuan dynasty who had continued to patronize and support the Confucian Duke Yansheng.
Influence
Throughout the years, influence of the Hanfu Movement has reached the
overseas Chinese diaspora and has led to the establishment of Hanfu Movement associations outside China, with the goal of promoting Chinese culture.
While the
Cheongsam tend to be used as the representative of the national identity in the previous generation of the overseas diaspora, nowadays, the young people within the overseas Chinese diaspora are more incline in the use of hanfu.
According to iiMedia, in 2019, the number of Hanfu organizations outside of China was estimated to be around 2,000 whereas it was 1,300 in 2017; this marks an increase of 53.8%.
+Overseas Hanfu Associations
!Countries
!Name of Hanfu Associations
!Founded in |
Argentina | Tiannan Hanjia Association (天南漢家) | |
Australia | Sydney Hanfu Association (汉服在悉尼) | 2011 |
Queensland Hanfu Association (昆士兰汉服社) | 2016 |
Canada | Hanfu Movement of Eastern Canada (加東漢服運動) | 2018 |
Association LingFeng Hanfu Montréal (蒙特利尔灵枫汉服社) | 2008 |
The Hanfu Society of Art and Music/Toronto Hanfu Society (多倫多禮樂漢服) | |
Europe | European Hanfu Association (歐洲漢服文化協會) | 2008 |
Indonesia | Hanfu Movement Indonesia (印尼漢服運動) | |
Malaysia | Hanfu Malaysia (馬來西亞漢服運動) | 2007 |
Dong Hsuan Fang (东玄坊) | |
New Zealand | Hanfu Association of NZ | |
Singapore | Han Cultural Society | |
United Kingdom | UK Han Culture Association | 2007 |
United States | New York Han Corporation (Hanfu NYC) (紐約漢服社) | 2014 |
Fuyao Hanfu Association (扶摇汉服社) | |
Northern California Hanfu Association (北加州汉服社) | |
Controversy
Authenticity - Purists and reformists
Since the beginning of the Hanfu Movement, defining what would constitute as authentic hanfu has been a subject of debate and can even be a critical issue for hanfu event organizations, and diverse schools of thought have emerged.
For example,
-
The purists (the more conservative members of the group) believe in the replication of ancient garments as the only way to guarantee the authenticity of the hanfu,
and that a hanfu cannot be called hanfu without reference to artefacts.
-
The reformists believe that the beauty and diversity of hanfu would be limited if they only limited themselves to the replication of archeological clothing artefacts,
as they have embraced various modified styles of hanfu despite being different from historical artefacts, and considers hanfu to be authentic enough if they based themselves on ancient materials as the basis and follows the general hanfu principles. In other words, they consider both contemporary hanfu and ancient hanfu as hanfu.
-
Some consider that the Hanfu Movement is not intended to completely imitate the ancient clothing as it would be difficult to replicate clothing that are identical to historical artefacts and 100% historically accurate. Instead, they believe that the modern hanfu should incorporate modern aesthetics, including allowing some adjustments to the lengths of the attire or sleeves, despite following the general principles of Han Chinese clothing.
Quality of Hanfu on the market
Concerns have been expressed about the poor quality and inauthenticity of
Hanfu currently on the market. This has damaged the reputation of
Hanfu and discouraging the manufacture of authentic or original designs. Factors inhibiting the market for authentic and high-quality hanfu include absence of consumer knowledge and the cheaper cost of inauthentic and poorly made spin-offs.
Han nationalism
Criticism of the Movement
Domestic criticism of the movement and reservations within the movement
In 2007, skeptics feared that designating
Hanfu as China's national costume could spark ethnic tensions, as China has 56 ethnicities, each with distinctive traditional clothing.
[ "Should China Adopt Hanfu as Its National Costume? ", Beijing Review, 10 July 2007] They decried the presence of "
Han nationalism in the movement. Enthusiasts, such as the Hanfu Society at Guangzhou University cautioned against politicizing the dress, fearing negative social repercussions
Hanfu advocates insist they never called for the abandonment of tradition by minorities, and that their fashion preferences are separate from their politics.
Criticism by Kevin Carrico - ultranationalism, fictional traditions, conspiracy theories
A vehement and protracted critique has been levied by Kevin Carrico, a scholar of contemporary Chinese society at Macquarie University. Carrico has criticized hanfu as an "invented style of dress" that transitioned from a fictional tradition to a reality on Chinese streets.
[Kevin Carrico, "The Great Han Race, Nationalism, and Tradition in China Today", UC Press, 2017, ] He argues there is no historical basis for specific apparel under the name "hanfu"
and that the movement is inherently racial, built on the narrative that Qing dynasty's Manchu rulers aimed to destroy Han people and Chinese civilization, transforming it into barbarism. Kevin Carrico argues that real historical atrocities, like the Yangzhou massacre and the queue decree, are mixed with the imaginary erasure of Han clothing in the Hanfu Movement. He claims the movement is driven by conspiracy theories suggesting a secret Manchu plot controlling key institutions in China since the post-1978 reform era.
[Kevin Carrico, A State of Warring Styles] Carrico's book, which fully discloses his critical stance on the Hanfu Movement,
has received mixed reviews.
In reality, the term "Hanfu" is used to refer to "Han clothing" to distinguish it from the clothing of non-Han people. This usage was already in use in dynasties before the Sui and Tang dynasties, as evidenced in historical records. Therefore, many people criticize Kevin Carrico's views as being driven by pure prejudice and racism against Han Chinese people.
Defense of the movement
Proportional representation and fairness for the Han in modern China
In 2001, netizens opposed Chinese politicians wearing
tangzhuang at the APEC summit, considering it inappropriate and non-representative due to its Manchu origin when over 90% of China's citizens are ethnic Han.
They associate the dress with the Qing dynasty, whom they hold responsible for the suppression of Han culture, and for failure to deal with Western predation during the Century of Humiliation. Proponents cite the persistence of traditional clothing among Chinese minorities and the use of kimono in Japan, hanbok in Korea, and the sari in India as inspiration for the Hanfu Movement, and reason that the Han should have their own ethnic dress celebrated as well.
Fun and recreation, moderate nationalism not ultranationalism
Ying Dai of Cardiff University notes that the modern Chinese public views Hanfu as a symbol of traditional aesthetics, heritage and culture, saying that the movement exhibits a moderate and positive vision of Chinese nationalism.
Colin Mackerras, while noting the pride of Chinese people in Chinese culture, views the movement as more likely driven by recreational needs such as fun and relaxation, rather than animated by Han revanchism. James Leibold of La Trobe University notes that Hanfu pioneers believe the issue of Han clothing is tied to racial identity and political power in China but highlights the movement's diversity, with individuals finding various meanings and enjoyment in Hanfu. Eric Fish, a freelance writer who lived in China from 2007 to 2014 as a teacher, student, and
journalist, believes that the Hanfu Movement does have "patriotic undertones" but "most Hanfu enthusiasts are in it for the fashion and community more than a racial or xenophobic motivation" and that contrary to popular belief, China's "young people overall are progressively getting less nationalistic". Proponents cite the persistence of traditional clothing among Chinese minorities and the use of kimono in Japan, hanbok in Korea, and the sari in India as inspiration for the Hanfu Movement, and reason that the Han should have their own ethnic dress celebrated as well.
Critical appraisal of Kevin Carrico's arguments
Critics expressed concerns about his portrayal of Chinese studies, contemporary anthropology, and Chinese nationalism, suggesting his work might inaccurately simplify or misrepresent these areas
Reviewers criticized the book for dismissing
ethnography,
misunderstanding or omitting the narratives of his Chinese informants,
offering revisionist stories about China's past and the Maoist era, and leaving issues such as other ideological drivers of the Hanfu Movement and the views of non-Han participants unaddressed
One reviewer expresses that people in China are proud of China and Chinese culture; however, the donning of traditional Chinese clothing is more likely for fun or relaxation than as being part of a sinister plot evolving around Han nationalist revival.
See also