• @nekandro@lemmy.mlOP
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    2310 months ago

    This study helps to explain aspects of Chinese culture that the West seems to lack understanding for: a meritocracy has been the foundation for Chinese social movement since the Tang dynasty. Upwards mobility was dictated by academic performance, not some notion of capital accrual.

    • @Rachelhazideas@lemmy.world
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      1710 months ago

      Academic performance is dictated by access to good educators which has always been dictated by wealth.

      The facade of merit has always been used to justify casting away ‘lazy people who don’t study enough’ when the reality is that not everyone can afford private tutors, exotic sports, cram school, travel experience, and every other paid tactic to overstuff kid’s resumes.

      • roastedDeflator
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        1010 months ago

        Academic performance is dictated by access to good educators which has always been dictated by wealth.

        By gender and wealth. Not only wealth.

        • @Rachelhazideas@lemmy.world
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          210 months ago

          True. It could be far better, but one thing China did vastly improve on since the 1950s is bringing women into the workforce and providing them with a far greater degree of autonomy and access to real education than women previously experienced.

          This might not sound like much since this has happened to varying degrees in many countries, but it’s understated how socially regressive Chinese views on women historically were (and still are). Not saying things are good now, because China is still rife with gender inequality issues. Just pointing out how disgusting and ingrained Confucian views on womanhood are and how much of a stain it has left on Chinese society.

    • roastedDeflator
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      710 months ago

      The way I see things meritocracy is a tricky notion. It implies that if you are dispossessed, it’s your fault and not a systemic failure.
      Patriarchy is a systemic failure because categorises half the population as second class citizens, and that is the best case senario. Historically, more often than not, women have not been considered as citizens per se.