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Environmental and Cultural Impacts of Chair-Shaped Tombs in Wenzhou, China

Luke Liu ()
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Luke Liu: North America International School, Senior High School Student

A chapter in Proceedings of the 2025 7th International Conference on Economic Management and Cultural Industry (ICEMCI 2025), 2025, pp 847-866 from Springer

Abstract: Abstract This study investigates the unique tradition of “chair-shaped tombs” (椅子坟, yǐzi fén) in rural Wenzhou and its environmental and sociocultural impacts. In Wenzhou’s hillside villages, the late 20th century saw many lineage clans build elaborate seat-like concrete tombs for their ancestors, reviving a deep-rooted burial custom centered on filial piety. However, these tombs have led to significant ecological degradation: the practice has “whitened” once-verdant hillsides with stark cement, destroyed vegetation, and squandered scarce land. Drawing on ethnographic studies and environmental research, this paper analyzes how these tombs evolved and how Wenzhou’s officials and communities are negotiating their dismantling or transformation. We review literature on Chinese burial reforms and green burials, document the “greening-to-whitening” effect of the tombs on landscape ecology, and examine the clash between traditional lineage culture and state-led ecological modernization. Our case study of Wenzhou shows that government campaigns to promote shengtai (生态, “ecological”) burials, smaller graves or communal memorials with no chair-like structures, have achieved notable land savings, yet confront popular resistance rooted in ancestor veneration. Ethnographic accounts indicate that local officials often tacitly tolerate traditional tombs out of respect for ancestral traditions, while higher-level mandates intensify enforcement. By integrating over thirty sources, this paper situates the Wenzhou tomb issue in broader debates on land use, ritual practice, and environmental governance. It concludes that sustainable reform of rural funerary practices requires balancing ecological goals with cultural values, suggesting that future approaches emphasize community participation, education, and culturally sensitive policy measures.

Keywords: Wenzhou; chair tombs; green burial; lineage culture; land use; environmental policy (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:advbcp:978-94-6463-888-2_84

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DOI: 10.2991/978-94-6463-888-2_84

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