It’s “Lunar New Year” now. Of course, there are many lunar calendars with differing starts of the year but let’s just pave over that to Frankenstein together some generic nonspecific holiday because Gyna bad.

  • trudge [comrade/them]
    ·
    10 months ago

    Vietnamese, Mongolian, and Korean new years all fall under the same day generally. They'll have to start saying that they celebrate Chinese New Year under your standards then.

    • Kaplya
      ·
      edit-2
      10 months ago

      Read my comment on this thread. The reason it’s called Chinese New Year has nothing to do with China but that 农历 (agricultural calendar) had been translated into “Chinese calendar” in English for reasons. It literally means “agricultural calendar new year” in Chinese.

      It is not accurate to call it Lunar New Year either (阴历新年, or the Yin calendar New Year) because the calendar dates of the agricultural calendar (农历) are calculated based on a combination of lunar (Yin) and solar (Yang) calendars.

      • trudge [comrade/them]
        ·
        10 months ago

        I think you need to understand what I'm trying to say here. People on this website's so America-brained that they don't see the distinction between American politicians saying "Lunar New Year" on purpose to erase Chinese heritage of the tradition in America, and local people in Asia saying that they celebrate their variant of new year instead of celebrating Chinese cultural new year, which is literally cultural appropriation against Chinese people.

        That is why there wasn't a pushback against your comment when I read it, yet there is one against oregoncom

        • Kaplya
          ·
          10 months ago

          OK fair enough that makes sense.

        • oregoncom [he/him]
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          edit-2
          10 months ago

          Literally nobody in Asia calls their particular new years "lunar new years". They have names for their new years (цаглабар, Tet, etc) Idk why you have to present this strange false dichotomy of calling it Chinese new years or using some bullshit liberal neologism.

          • trudge [comrade/them]
            ·
            10 months ago

            Point out where I said that we should call it "lunar new year" or that they do so in Asia. You can't. You're so wrapped up in your head that you're not even reading what I wrote and responding instead of shadowboxing an imaginary construct that you think you read.

            • oregoncom [he/him]
              ·
              10 months ago

              The Latin Alphabet is called the Latin alphabet even when it's used for English. Different languages use their own variants of the Latin alphabet, and when the differences matter then you say "English Alphabet" or "Spanish Alphabet". If you want collectively refer to all these alphabets then you would say "Latin Alphabet". The only reason you wouldn't say "Latin Alphabet" and come up with some neologism like "Phoneme Combination Script" is if you really didn't want to acknowledge where the Latin alphabet came from.

      • oregoncom [he/him]
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        edit-2
        10 months ago

        It's called Chinese Calendar for the same reason people call the gregorian calendar 西曆(western calendar). 農曆 is a neologism from after the gregorian calendar was adopted. Are you going to insist we do a literal translation of 漢語 instead of just saying Chinese? From now on I'm going to call the Latin Alphabet "west eurasian phoneme combination script".

    • oregoncom [he/him]
      ·
      edit-2
      10 months ago

      Vietnam does their own calendar calculations (Based off of the Chinese calendar) and the longitude difference makes it fall on different days on certain years. The Koreans don't have their own calendar they literally use the Chinese calendar, specificly the most recent revision of it from the Qing dynasty. Mongolia uses a completely different calendar based off of the Tibetan one. Fuck off with your orientalist bullshit. All these places with the exception of Korea have seperate calendars and they already have different names for their new years. Koreans can call it Korean New Years when they make their own calendar like the Vietnamese did.

      • trudge [comrade/them]
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        edit-2
        10 months ago

        You do realize that China as a multiethnic state celebrates minority cultures like those of Tibetan, Mongolian, Korean, etc. (Even Vietnamese although they are a much smaller ethnic group) A guy who puts as his username the American state Oregon talking about Chinese culture. What a joke. When your first thought is Occupied Korea and how they measure the lunar year instead of Koreans in Yanbian, you need to fuck off and educate yourself.

        • oregoncom [he/him]
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          edit-2
          10 months ago

          It's the Chinese calendar not the Han calendar. The Chinese calendar is the product of the Multiethnic Chinese state. Historically one of the important functions of the Chinese state is to compile the calendar. This has been the case even in dynasties **run by ethnic minorities. ** such as aforementioned Qing dynasty. It's not my fault that English uses the same words to denote nationality and ethnicity. The fact that you just automatically assume anything called Chinese is automatically exclusive to Han Chinese is sus.

          Countries that celebrate Chinese New Year do so because they were vassal states in the past (Korea, Vietnam, Japan Historically) or because they have a large Chinese diaspora (Singapore, Malaysia, which has both Hui and Han Chinese Diaspora). In the case of Vietnam, the Vietnamese state began doing their own calculations at some point, hence why I will acknowledge Tet as a seperate holiday. Vietnam is also an multiethnic state, and I doubt that only the Kinh majority celebrate Tet. Also, the first dynasty to introduce the Chinese calendar to Vietnam was the Mongol Yuan dynasty.

          Occupied Korea doesn't have their own calendar, they went from being Qing Vassals directly to using the Gregorian Calendar during the Gabo Reforms of 1896. If you look up the article on "Korean calendar" on wikipedia, it will state straight up that it's the same as the Chinese calendar, which was last revised in the Qing dynasty. Only occupied Korea claims they celebrate a seperate holiday for nationalistic reasons. Ethnic Koreans in China would probably be offended if you told them that they're actually celebrating a different New Years than everyone else. In fact I don't think even the DPRK claims that there's a pre-Gregorian "Korean Calendar" seperate from the Chinese Calendar.

          Minority groups that do have their own calendars also celebrate Chinese New Year since it's the Chinese New Year and not the Han new year. Mongolian and Tibetan New years usually (although not always) fall on seperate days. Ethnic Mongols in China also celebrate on a seperate day than people in Mongolia the country.

          • trudge [comrade/them]
            ·
            10 months ago

            Japan's never been a vassal but you can correct me if I'm wrong on that part.

            You're so used to seeing it through the eyes of a statist that you can't even fathom that people celebrating their new year comes before some Chinese officials compiled the calendar. Is the event in question the calendar or the celebration? You're purposefully misconstruing the argument as if it's about the calendar, not the celebration that indigenous people do in Asia as you are so removed from the people that you cannot even see this point.

            Ethnic Koreans in China would probably be offended if you told them that they're actually celebrating a different New Years than everyone else.

            Through personal relations to ethnically Yanbian Korean Chinese people, I can tell you that it is false. You keep talking about some calendar system as if that is what marks holidays, and you're so far as to gone to claim now that Koreans celebrate Chinese new year and that Vietnamese Tet has origins in different system of calendar measurement instead of people celebrating their new year the way they always did. Are you even listening to yourself? So by your standards, if Occupied Korea measures their own calendar, it's suddenly a different holiday? You're talking nonsense.

            • oregoncom [he/him]
              ·
              10 months ago

              if Occupied Korea measures their own calendar, it's suddenly a different holiday?

              Yes. otherwise they're all just some version of Chinese New Years. You have to draw the line somewhere. Christmas isn't a different holiday because they celebrate it in a different way in the Phillipines vs. the US.

              Through personal relations to ethnically Yanbian Korean Chinese people,

              Some dude from the Bay Area you met one time isn't a real argument. I'm literally from Northeastern China and my grandfather lived in an ethnic Korean village when he was younger. Nobody thinks ethnic Koreans are celebrating a seperate holiday because they don't have a seperate calendar. Why the fuck would their ethnicity magically make it so that they're celebrating a seperate holiday. Do you go up to black people and say "Happy African-American New Years!" on Jan 1st?

              You're so used to seeing it through the eyes of a statist that you can't even fathom that people celebrating their new year comes before some Chinese officials compiled the calendar

              The Chinese state is the only reason any of these people celebrate New Years wtf. The Chinese calendar is an inherently statist construct. It has been a statist concept for millennial before any group of people we would recognize as Korean even existed. The fact that it's so closely tied to the state is why Occupied Koreans insist on there being a non-existent "Korean Calendar" in the first place. You have no understanding of where anything comes from or what the actual cultural significance is, and do everything you can to water it down into some meaningless bullshit like those people who insist Christmas is a secular holiday.

              How Koreans or anybody else celebrates it is is irrelevant to whether it's a seperate holiday. My family celebrates Chinese New Years by eating crab. Do I now get to demand that everyone have to wish me a happy Oregoncom New Year? The fact that people in Moscow celebrate the Gregorian New Year differently than people in New York doesn't mean that they're magically seperate holidays. The definition of a holiday is what they're celebrating not how.

              • trudge [comrade/them]
                ·
                10 months ago

                You certainly have one of the strangest takes I've ever seen a person make.

                I'm literally from Northeastern China and my grandfather lived in an ethnic Korean village when he was younger

                Don't pass off your granddad's lived experience off as your own lol. It doesn't do anything to strengthen your argument besides making you look cringe in an effort to look authentic.

                By your standards, Shogatsu is a different festival now that the date changed from the lunisolar calendar to the Gregorian. Obviously it's the same holiday tradition that is celebrated on a different date! I don't see how you're being so obstinate when it is crystal clear. People are not celebrating some calendar date, they are celebrating their traditional new year celebration that has been practiced for more than a millenia.

                • oregoncom [he/him]
                  ·
                  10 months ago

                  Shogatsu

                  That's my point exactly, nobody goes around saying "Happy Japanese New Years" on Jan 1st, because the Japanese are just celebrating Gregorian new years like everybody else. Them celebrating it the way they used to celebrate Japanese new years in the past didn't change that. Likewise with Russians, them carrying over traditions from celebrating Julian New Years doesn't mean they celebrate a different holiday from Jan 1st.

                  Don't pass off your granddad's lived experience off as your own lol. It doesn't do anything to strengthen your argument besides making you look cringe in an effort to look authentic.

                  One of my grandparents being raised by Chinese Koreans is more relevant than you knowing a random Chinese Korean guy lmao.

                  I see that we just have different definitions of what constitutes a holiday and it's useless arguing. But I will maintain that the point of a New Years celebration is to celebrate the New Year. If any holiday is dependent on the Calendar its based off of then it would be New Years.