Tripartite guanxi: resolving kin and non-kin discontinuities in Chinese connections
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Authors
Barbalet, Jack
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Kluwer Academic Publishers
Abstract
A consensus holds that guanxi, understood as dyadic connections consolidated affectively and mobilized to achieve the purposes of members, exists in three forms (family guanxi, friendship guanxi, and acquaintance guanxi) distinguished by the strength of
felt obligation between participants. It is also held that through practices of fictive kinship friendship guanxi may merge with family guanxi. This article challenges these propositions and the assumptions underlying them. Obligations of kinship and guanxi
obligations are fundamentally dissimilar and the term 'family guanxi' is redundant. Pseudo-family ties do not provide access to kin relations and their resources but instead affirm the distinction between family- and friendship-ties. Finally, because guanxi is
cultivated by its participants, friendship guanxi and acquaintance guanxi are not distinct
forms but rather are different possible stages of guanxi formation. The article goes on to consider the sources of these confusions, namely, common-language terms employed in sociological analysis, certain assumptions concerning Chinese culture, and finally
methodological commitments that privilege latent structures of strong ties. The strength
of guanxi ties, on the other hand, volitionally cultivated and indifferent to structural
determination, fluctuates through agentic practices.
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Theory and Society
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Restricted until
2099-12-31