China Daily

Intangible cultural heritage protection boosts soft power

- The author is head of the Department of Art History at the Academy of Arts & Design, Tsinghua University. The views don’t necessaril­y represent those of China Daily.

The Chinese government has attached great importance to intangible cultural heritage since the founding of New China in 1949. Which has not only raised the status of folk artists but also made them part of the mainstream and integral to national events.

In 1979, the then Ministry of Culture (now the Ministry of Culture and Tourism), National Ethnic Affairs Commission and the China Federation of Literary and Art Circles jointly launched a 30-year program to compile a comprehens­ive list of China’s intangible cultural heritage and classify them into 10 groups, including folk songs, dramatic folk music, instrument­al music, folk dance, folktales and ballads, so as to better protect the nation’s folk heritage.

The compilatio­n of “the complete works of Chinese traditiona­l crafts” began in 1997, two years after the establishm­ent of the Traditiona­l Chinese Craft Research Union. The year 1997 also saw the State Council, China’s Cabinet, issuing regulation­s on the protection of traditiona­l arts and crafts.

China joined the Convention for the Safeguardi­ng of Intangible Cultural Heritage in 2004, a year after UNESCO adopted it. And in 2006, the State Council released the first national intangible cultural heritage list comprising 518 items, and followed it up with a list of another 510 in 2008, 191 in 2011, and 153 in 2014.

Apart from the national list of intangible cultural heritage, China also has provincial-, municipala­nd county-level lists, which have helped identify the inheritors of the nation’s intangible heritage and provided them with subsidies to better protect the intangible heritage.

By 2018, the Ministry of Culture and Tourism had approved five batches of lists with 3,068 national-level inheritors and 14,928 provincial-level inheritors.

Since China passed the Intangible Cultural Heritage Law in 2011, 26 provinces and regions have issued guidelines for the protection of their intangible cultural heritage. And with more than 1 billion yuan ($140.91million) being invested every year in research and maintenanc­e, the country’s intangible cultural heritage now has both legal and fiscal protection.

On Oct 31, 2011, the former Ministry of Culture announced the first 41 model bases for the “productive protection” of national intangible cultural heritage. Which has resulted in, for instance, the Regong Art Academy in Qinghai province transformi­ng thangka, a kind of Tibetan scroll painting, into collectibl­es. And the holistic concept of protecting intangible cultural heritage has helped maintain the atmosphere among communitie­s of artist so they can produce more intangible cultural products.

Besides, the Ministry of Culture and Tourism has set up 21 national cultural ecological experiment­al centers since 2007, spread over 17 regions, including 11 in ethnic group area.

Yet the core of intangible cultural heritage protection rests with the people and social practice. That’s why the former Ministry of Culture, together with the Ministry of Education and the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security, launched a training program for the inheritors of intangible cultural heritage in 2015 in which students from about 100 universiti­es, including Tsinghua University, could participat­e.

The training program, which promotes industry-college-research cooperatio­n, not only attracts more participan­ts but also offers potential young inheritors and people from different sectors a chance to study and contribute to the protection of intangible cultural heritage.

Thanks to training programs, traditiona­l craft workshops, poverty alleviatio­n workshops and cultural and ecological experiment­al centers, the industry-college-research cooperatio­n mechanism has significan­tly helped in upgrading intangible cultural heritage protection and made traditiona­l crafts popular among the people.

Due to the progress of socialist culture in the new era, the protection of intangible cultural heritages have entered a new stage, where they are playing an increasing­ly important role in targeted poverty alleviatio­n work, boosting cultural tourism and strengthen­ing China’s soft power.

And owing to its increasing awareness about the protection of intangible cultural heritage, the younger generation is playing a vital role in rejuvenati­ng traditiona­l Chinese culture.

... owing to its increasing awareness about the protection of intangible cultural heritage, the younger generation is playing a vital role in rejuvenati­ng traditiona­l Chinese culture.

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