Jiangxi culture should be the hidden core and pillar of China culture, and several surrounding cultures, including Chu culture, Wu Yue culture and Yue culture, are the tentacles of Jiangxi culture extending in all directions. The real root of China traditional culture lies in Jiangxi. Interestingly, China's roots are in Taoism, and Taoism's roots are in Jiangxi. People only pay attention to the dominant Hunan, Zhejiang, Guangdong and other places, but not to the hidden Jiangxi.
Therefore, when western culture enters China, only when it comes to Jiangxi can China be truly moved. Only when Jiangxi moves, will China really resist completely, and so will China's reform. Only when Jiangxi changes in the future can the fate of China as a whole and the country really change. This is an interesting guess of mine. In a word, the fate of China is related to Jiangxi.
Some people may ask, what is the most important root of Jiangxi culture and even China culture? In short, seeking truth from facts is often mentioned in politics. Maybe I can sum it up in one sentence: Jiangxi is the cradle of China's practical learning for hundreds of years. The tenacity and firmness of China's traditional culture lies in Jiangxi. Without Jiangxi as the foundation, China's traditional culture can't move forward!
Jiangxi is known as the "land of meaning", and there were no outstanding talents before the Song Dynasty. Apart from Tao Yuanming, there are almost no other cultural celebrities with weight, but they rose rapidly in the middle and late Northern Song Dynasty, completely replacing Henan as the cultural center (as far as poets are concerned, in the Tang Dynasty, everyone in the Tang Dynasty left Zhongzhou; in the Song Dynasty, it turned out that everyone in the Song Dynasty left Jiangxi; in the Tang Dynasty, ". In the Song Dynasty, there was "King Su Huang of Europe" (three from Jiangxi and one from Shu), and they stayed there until the middle and early Ming Dynasty. Besides, the Song Dynasty was the peak of China culture, and the Song and Ming Dynasties were the second era of a hundred schools of thought contending in the academic and cultural history of China, among which Jiangxi intellectuals were undoubtedly the protagonists. In the Song Dynasty, many cultural giants emerged in Jiangyou. Yan Shu, Ouyang Xiu, Li Gou, Ceng Gong, Wang Anshi, Huang Tingjian, Lu Jiuyuan, Yang Wanli, Jiang Kui and Wen Tianxiang are the most outstanding representatives, and this period is undoubtedly the heyday of brilliant humanities in Jiangxi. From the Yuan Dynasty to the early Ming Dynasty, Jiangxi literati inherited the legacy of the Song Dynasty. In the field of orthodox culture, their achievements and status are second to none, and then they also operate at a relatively high level. Since the Yuan Dynasty, Jiangxi has produced cultural celebrities such as Ma Duanlin, Wu Cheng, Luo Guanzhong, Luo Qinshun, Tang Xianzu, Song, Wei, Jiang Shiquan, Chen, Wen, Li Ruiqing, Chen Yinque, Hsiao Kung chuan and Fu Baoshi. This can also be called super mystery! Such a province with the highest achievements in the heyday of Chinese culture should occupy a seat.