Coming home: a study of values change among Chinese postgraduates and visiting scholars who encountered Christianity in the U.K.

This thesis examines changes in core values held by postgraduate students and visiting scholars from China who professed belief in Christianity while studying in UK universities. It is the first study to ascertain whether changes remain after return to China. Employing a theoretical framework constr...

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Main Author: Dickson, Deborah
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13458/
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author Dickson, Deborah
author_facet Dickson, Deborah
author_sort Dickson, Deborah
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis examines changes in core values held by postgraduate students and visiting scholars from China who professed belief in Christianity while studying in UK universities. It is the first study to ascertain whether changes remain after return to China. Employing a theoretical framework constructed from work by James Fowler, Charles Taylor, Yuting Wang and Fenggang Yang, it identifies both factors contributing to initial change in the UK and factors contributing to sustained change after return to China. It shows that lasting values change occurred. As a consequence, tensions were experienced at work, socially and in church. However, these were outweighed by benefits, including inner security, particularly after a distressed childhood. Benefits were also experienced in personal relationships and in belonging in a new community, the Church. This was a qualitative, interpretive study employing ethnographic interviews with nineteen people, from eleven British universities, in seven Chinese cities. It was based on the hypotheses that Christian conversion leads to change in values and that evidence for values can be found in responses to major decisions and dilemmas, in saddest and happiest memories and in relationships. Conducted against a backdrop of transnational movement of people and ideas, including a recent increase in mainland Chinese studying abroad which has led to more Chinese in British churches, it contributes new insights into both the contents of sustained Christian conversion amongst Chinese abroad who have since returned to China and factors contributing to it. Bringing the afore-mentioned theories together for the first time it provides an illuminating, original lens for further study of conversion amongst returned Chinese. It also adds to knowledge of the effects of Chinese students’ UK education experience on their values.
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spelling nottingham-134582025-02-28T11:25:19Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13458/ Coming home: a study of values change among Chinese postgraduates and visiting scholars who encountered Christianity in the U.K. Dickson, Deborah This thesis examines changes in core values held by postgraduate students and visiting scholars from China who professed belief in Christianity while studying in UK universities. It is the first study to ascertain whether changes remain after return to China. Employing a theoretical framework constructed from work by James Fowler, Charles Taylor, Yuting Wang and Fenggang Yang, it identifies both factors contributing to initial change in the UK and factors contributing to sustained change after return to China. It shows that lasting values change occurred. As a consequence, tensions were experienced at work, socially and in church. However, these were outweighed by benefits, including inner security, particularly after a distressed childhood. Benefits were also experienced in personal relationships and in belonging in a new community, the Church. This was a qualitative, interpretive study employing ethnographic interviews with nineteen people, from eleven British universities, in seven Chinese cities. It was based on the hypotheses that Christian conversion leads to change in values and that evidence for values can be found in responses to major decisions and dilemmas, in saddest and happiest memories and in relationships. Conducted against a backdrop of transnational movement of people and ideas, including a recent increase in mainland Chinese studying abroad which has led to more Chinese in British churches, it contributes new insights into both the contents of sustained Christian conversion amongst Chinese abroad who have since returned to China and factors contributing to it. Bringing the afore-mentioned theories together for the first time it provides an illuminating, original lens for further study of conversion amongst returned Chinese. It also adds to knowledge of the effects of Chinese students’ UK education experience on their values. 2013 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13458/1/DD_Thesis_2_May_2013.pdf Dickson, Deborah (2013) Coming home: a study of values change among Chinese postgraduates and visiting scholars who encountered Christianity in the U.K. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Values Conversion Christian Chinese Students Change
spellingShingle Values
Conversion
Christian
Chinese Students
Change
Dickson, Deborah
Coming home: a study of values change among Chinese postgraduates and visiting scholars who encountered Christianity in the U.K.
title Coming home: a study of values change among Chinese postgraduates and visiting scholars who encountered Christianity in the U.K.
title_full Coming home: a study of values change among Chinese postgraduates and visiting scholars who encountered Christianity in the U.K.
title_fullStr Coming home: a study of values change among Chinese postgraduates and visiting scholars who encountered Christianity in the U.K.
title_full_unstemmed Coming home: a study of values change among Chinese postgraduates and visiting scholars who encountered Christianity in the U.K.
title_short Coming home: a study of values change among Chinese postgraduates and visiting scholars who encountered Christianity in the U.K.
title_sort coming home: a study of values change among chinese postgraduates and visiting scholars who encountered christianity in the u.k.
topic Values
Conversion
Christian
Chinese Students
Change
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13458/