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The Changjiao Miao people, who live in the mountainous region of Western
Guizhou Province, were formerly a closed nation, and these days their culture
still preserves some of its pre-industrial components.
Despite the fact that the Changjiao Miao people have developed rapidly in the
industrial era, they have maintained many facets of their pre-industrial,
agricultural lifestyles. Because they do not write with characters, a lot of
their history is recorded orally and through the usage of their own figures. The
figures were developed over time and helped the Changjiao Miao people record
their own culture more permanently, facilitating communication over the
generations.
Although figures aid in the transmission of Changjiao Miao people's culture,
their oral histories,including songs, mythological tales and poems, are
more detailed and developed.
Figure symbols
Most of the Changjiao Miao people's decorative symbols
were integrated into their clothing, rather than adorning their tools or
architecture, as is common in many other societies. The reason for this lies in
the fact that the Changjiao Miao people were formerly a nomadic society, meaning
that accumulating a large number of tools or constructing permanent buildings
would have been pointless, since these things would have had to be left behind
when the people moved.
Clothing was decorated as a way to preserve the people's history, in a format
that was portable, as clothing would be taken when the group moved. Various
symbols had different meanings, such as a square, which represented a field that
had been ploughed; a stripe, which stood for a river that had been crossed; and
various depictions of food they had eaten and tools they had used. These
representations allowed the group to visibly wear the symbols of their common
history and outlook on the world.
Embroidery was a skill passed down from mothers to their young daughters, who
were typically 6 years old when they started learning the craft. The people made
most of their clothes themselves and the symbols were a medium for the
communication of their world views. Modernization has meant that the traditional
meanings of some of these symbols has been forgotten.
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