The roles and expectations of females and males differed greatly in
post-classical China.
Below are some documents that will give you a small insight into the life
of a male in post-classical China.
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It was thought best for a boy to start upon
his studies as early as possible. From the very beginning, he was instructed
almost entirely in the classics, since mathematics could be left to merchants,
while science and technology were relegated to the working class. A potential
grand official must study the Four Books, the Five Classics, and other Confucian
works, and, further, he must know how to compose poems and write essays. For
the most part, questions in civil service examinations did not go beyond these
areas of competence.
When
he was just a little more than three years old, a boy's education began at
home, under the supervision of his mother or some other suitable person. Even
at this early stage, the child's home environment exerted a great effect upon
his development. In cultivated families, where books were stacked high against
the walls, the baby sitter taught the boy his first characters while playing.
Formal education began at
about seven years of age (or eight, counting in Chinese style). Boys from
families that could afford the expense were sent to a temple, village,
communal, or private school staffed by former officials who had lost their
positions, or by old scholars who had repeatedly failed the examinations as
the years slipped by. Sons of rich men and powerful officials often were taught
at home by a family tutor in an elegant small room located in a detached
building, which stood in a courtyard planted with trees and shrubs, in order to
create an atmosphere conducive to study.
A
class usually consisted of eight or nine students. Instruction centered on the
Four Books, beginning with the Analects, and the process of learning was
almost entirely a matter of sheer memorization. With their books open before
them, the students would parrot the teacher, phrase by phrase, as he read out
the text. Inattentive students, or those who amused themselves by playing with
toys hidden in their sleeves, would be scolded by the teacher or hit on the
palms and thighs with his fan-shaped "warning ruler." The high regard
for discipline was reflected in the saying, "If education is not strict,
it shows that the teacher is lazy."
Students who had learned
how to read a passage would return to their seats and review what they had just
been taught. After reciting it a hundred times, fifty times while looking at
the book and fifty with the book face down, even the least gifted would have
memorized it. At first, the boys were given twenty to thirty characters a day,
but as they became more experienced, they memorized one, two, or several
hundred each day. In order not to force a student beyond his capacity, a boy
who could memorize four hundred characters would be assigned no more than two
hundred. Otherwise, he might become so distressed as to end by detesting his
studies.
Moreover, the boys were
at an age when the urge to play is strongest, and they suffered bitterly when
they were confined all day in a classroom as though under detention. Parents
and teachers, therefore, supported a lad, urging him on to "become a great
man!" From ancient times, many poems were composed on the theme, "If
you study while young, you will get ahead." The Sung emperor Chen-tsung
wrote such a one:
To enrich your family, no need to buy good land:
Books hold a thousand measures of grain.
For an easy life, no need to build a mansion:
In books are found houses of gold.
Going out,
be not vexed at absence of followers:
In
books, carriages and horses form a crowd;
Marrying,
be not vexed by lack of a good go-between:
In
books there are girls and faces of jade.
A boy
who wants to become a somebody
Devotes
himself to the classics, faces the window, and reads.
The end result of
all this schooling and intense preparation was the passing of the civil
exams. However, the success rates of
these exams were extremely small: During the Tang Dynasty the passing rate was
about two percent. The personal suffering that individuals underwent both in
the preparation and in the taking of these exams has become part of Chinese
lore. Candidates were known to repeatedly fail exams. Some committed suicide
because of the disgrace that these failures brought to their families. Others
continued taking exams even as very old, grey-haired men. Basically a man’s
entire life was centered around passing the exam and you stress about a global test.