Tag Archives | Modernization

Literary Fiction Indicates Early Modernization in China Prior to Western Influence

Ying Zhong, Valentin Thouzeau, Nicolas Baumard

Sociological Science April 23, 2025
10.15195/v12.a10


Modernization refers to the shift from traditional values to individual autonomy and self-development, driven by economic development. Previously considered unique to Western culture, modernization has now emerged as a global phenomenon, with East Asia playing a leading role. This article explores the possibility that modernization might have occurred outside the Western world prior to Western influence. We pioneered a novel approach for understanding the evolution of Chinese values by creating a unique and comprehensive database of narrative fiction. This database includes all major Chinese narrative fiction from the Tang dynasty (7th century) to the present, encompassing 3,496 works from mainland China and 3,338 modern works from Singapore, Taiwan, and Hong Kong. It also provides a systematic comparison of ancient fictions and their modern adaptations (e.g., Journey to the West ). Our findings confirm that modernization has been underway in China since the late twentieth century. Surprisingly, a similar rise in modern values was detected as early as the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, coinciding with significant economic development. This era saw an increasing expression of romantic love, open-mindedness, and reciprocal cooperation. However, this shift was not sustained, leading to a significant reassertion of traditional values from the late eighteenth century until the early twentieth century. These findings not only highlight the nuanced dynamics of early modernization beyond Western contexts but also demonstrate that values are dynamic, evolving constantly in response to economic development, thereby challenging the binary distinction between WEIRD (Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich and Democratic) and non-WEIRD societies.
Creative Commons LicenseThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Ying Zhong: Institut Jean Nicod, Département d’études cognitives, École normale supérieure
E-mail: yingzhong196@gmail.com

Valentin Thouzeau: Institut Jean Nicod, Département d’études cognitives, École normale supérieure
E-mail: valentinthouzeau@gmail.com

Nicolas Baumard: Institut Jean Nicod, Département d’études cognitives, École normale supérieure
E-mail: nbaumard@gmail.com

Acknowledgements: This work was supported by the Chinese Scholarship Council (CSC) grant 202106220093. We also thank the members of the Evolution and Social Cognition team for their helpful comments on our work.

Supplemental Materials

Reproducibility Package: The data analyzed in this article are available at https://osf.io/5bkqa. All replication codes and detailed instructions for replication can also be accessed at the same link. The pre-registration documents are available at https://osf.io/9nxpe.

  • Citation: Ying, Zhong, Valentin Thouzeau, and Nicolas Baumard. 2025. “Literary Fiction Indicates Early Modernization in China Prior to Western Influence” Sociological Science 12: 202-231.
  • Received: December 2, 2024
  • Accepted: January 31, 2025
  • Editors: Ari Adut, Kieran Healey
  • DOI: 10.15195/v12.a10

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Modernization and Lynching in the New South

Mattias Smångs

Sociological Science, September 15, 2016
DOI 10.15195/v3.a35

This article evaluates an emerging body of historical scholarship that challenges prevailing views of the primacy of rural conditions in southern lynching by positing that it was symbiotically associated with the processes of modernization underway in the region in the decades around 1900. Statistical analyses of lynching data that differentiate among events according to communal participation, support, and ceremony in Georgia and Louisiana from 1882 to 1930 and local-level indices of modernization (urbanization, rural depopulation, industrialization, agricultural commercialization, and dissolution of traditional family roles) yield results that both support and contradict such a modernization thesis of lynching. The findings imply that the consequences of the social transformation in the South coinciding with the lynching era were not uniform throughout the region with regard to racial conflict and violence and that broad arguments proposing an intrinsic connection between modernization and lynchings therefore are overstated.

Creative Commons LicenseThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Mattias Smångs: Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Fordham University
Email: msmangs@fordham.edu

Acknowledgements: I thank Peter Bearman, Janet Box-Steffensmeier, Christine Fountain, David Hacker, and Kenneth Sylvester for helpful comments on earlier versions of this article.

  • Citation: Smångs, Mattias. 2016. “Modernization and Lynching in the New South.” Sociological Science 3: 825-848.
  • Received: June 1, 2016
  • Accepted: July 8, 2016
  • Editors: Jesper Sørensen, Delia Baldassarri
  • DOI: 10.15195/v3.a35


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