Young political adviser of Hani promotes intangible culture with new ideas
"Intangible cultural relics are not antiques scattered with dust, but living fossils in life," said Yang Yuni, born in 1996, a young member of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference.
Yang, of Hani ethnic group, was born in the Hani terrace of Honghe, Southwest China's Yunnan province. She founded a Yuni culture and art center when she was a freshman in college. After graduation, she returned to her hometown and began to teach Hani songs and dances in an innovative way. Yang shared her experience of promoting intangible culture among ethnic minority youth, hoping to combine traditional culture with modern popular elements in a way that young people can appreciate.
Click the video to learn more about her interview with China Daily website.
- China details measures to further advance agricultural modernization, rural revitalization
- Researchers uncover key to overcoming drug resistance in breast cancer
- Chinese scientists achieve major breakthrough in scalable quantum networks
- 1,200-seat high-speed passenger ship put into operation in Beihai, China's Guangxi
- Study explores climatic regulation of mercury deposition in plateau lake
- China to step up tough crackdown on telecom scams: senior official































