Knapp 2014, pp. 135–6, 141, 145. Knapp, K.N. (2014), "Chinese Filial Cannibalism: A Silk Road Import?", in Wong, D.C.; Heldt, Gusthav (eds.), China and Beyond in the Mediaeval Period: Cultural Crossings and Inter-regional Connections, Cambria Press, pp. 135–49, archived from the original on 2019-07-12, retrieved 2019-07-12
For the resistance to change and attitudes of superiority, see Kwan (2000, pp. 27, 34). For the other consequences, see Yee (2006). Ho (1994, p. 361) also describes the link with resistance to change, the learning attitudes, fatalism, dogmatism, authoritarianism and conformism. Kwan, K.L.K. (2000), "Counseling Chinese peoples: Perspectives of Filial Piety"(PDF), Asian Journal of Counseling, 7 (1): 23–41, archived from the original(PDF) on 2016-07-05, retrieved 2018-12-23 Yee, B.W.K. (2006), "Filial Piety", in Jackson, Y. (ed.), Encyclopedia of Multicultural Psychology, SAGE Publications, p. 214, ISBN978-1-4522-6556-8 Ho, D. Y. F. (1994), "Filial Piety, Authoritarian Moralism and Cognitive Conservatism in Chinese Societies", Genetic, Social, and General Psychology Monographs, 120 (3): 349–65, hdl:10722/53184, ISSN8756-7547, PMID7926697
Kwan 2000, p. 23, quote: "Xiao xun, the Chinese term for filial piety, commands the younger in the family to be respectful (i.e., xiao) and obedient (i.e., xun) to one's parents and other elderly members related to the family". Kwan, K.L.K. (2000), "Counseling Chinese peoples: Perspectives of Filial Piety"(PDF), Asian Journal of Counseling, 7 (1): 23–41, archived from the original(PDF) on 2016-07-05, retrieved 2018-12-23
For the resistance to change and attitudes of superiority, see Kwan (2000, pp. 27, 34). For the other consequences, see Yee (2006). Ho (1994, p. 361) also describes the link with resistance to change, the learning attitudes, fatalism, dogmatism, authoritarianism and conformism. Kwan, K.L.K. (2000), "Counseling Chinese peoples: Perspectives of Filial Piety"(PDF), Asian Journal of Counseling, 7 (1): 23–41, archived from the original(PDF) on 2016-07-05, retrieved 2018-12-23 Yee, B.W.K. (2006), "Filial Piety", in Jackson, Y. (ed.), Encyclopedia of Multicultural Psychology, SAGE Publications, p. 214, ISBN978-1-4522-6556-8 Ho, D. Y. F. (1994), "Filial Piety, Authoritarian Moralism and Cognitive Conservatism in Chinese Societies", Genetic, Social, and General Psychology Monographs, 120 (3): 349–65, hdl:10722/53184, ISSN8756-7547, PMID7926697
Sung 2001, p. 15. Sung, K.T. (2001), "Elder Respect: Exploration of Ideals and Forms in East Asia", Journal of Aging Studies, 15 (1): 13–26, doi:10.1016/S0890-4065(00)00014-1
Oh 1991, p. 48. Oh, Tai K. (February 1991), "Understanding Managerial Values and Behaviour among the Gang of Four: South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore and Hong Kong", Journal of Management Development, 10 (2): 46–56, doi:10.1108/02621719110141095
Sung 2001, pp. 15–6. Sung, K.T. (2001), "Elder Respect: Exploration of Ideals and Forms in East Asia", Journal of Aging Studies, 15 (1): 13–26, doi:10.1016/S0890-4065(00)00014-1
Sung 2001, p. 17. Sung, K.T. (2001), "Elder Respect: Exploration of Ideals and Forms in East Asia", Journal of Aging Studies, 15 (1): 13–26, doi:10.1016/S0890-4065(00)00014-1
Sung 2001, p. 18. Sung, K.T. (2001), "Elder Respect: Exploration of Ideals and Forms in East Asia", Journal of Aging Studies, 15 (1): 13–26, doi:10.1016/S0890-4065(00)00014-1
Sung 2001, pp. 16–7. Sung, K.T. (2001), "Elder Respect: Exploration of Ideals and Forms in East Asia", Journal of Aging Studies, 15 (1): 13–26, doi:10.1016/S0890-4065(00)00014-1
Sung 2001, p. 14. Sung, K.T. (2001), "Elder Respect: Exploration of Ideals and Forms in East Asia", Journal of Aging Studies, 15 (1): 13–26, doi:10.1016/S0890-4065(00)00014-1
Sung 2001, pp. 17–8. Sung, K.T. (2001), "Elder Respect: Exploration of Ideals and Forms in East Asia", Journal of Aging Studies, 15 (1): 13–26, doi:10.1016/S0890-4065(00)00014-1
Sung 2001, p. 19. Sung, K.T. (2001), "Elder Respect: Exploration of Ideals and Forms in East Asia", Journal of Aging Studies, 15 (1): 13–26, doi:10.1016/S0890-4065(00)00014-1
Sung 2001, pp. 22–4. Sung, K.T. (2001), "Elder Respect: Exploration of Ideals and Forms in East Asia", Journal of Aging Studies, 15 (1): 13–26, doi:10.1016/S0890-4065(00)00014-1
Truitt 2015, p. 292. Truitt, Allison (2015), "Not a Day but a Vu Lan Season: Celebrating Filial Piety in the Vietnamese Diaspora", Journal of Asian American Studies, 18 (3): 289–311, doi:10.1353/jaas.2015.0025, S2CID147509428
Sung 2001, p. 21. Sung, K.T. (2001), "Elder Respect: Exploration of Ideals and Forms in East Asia", Journal of Aging Studies, 15 (1): 13–26, doi:10.1016/S0890-4065(00)00014-1
Sung 2001, p. 22. Sung, K.T. (2001), "Elder Respect: Exploration of Ideals and Forms in East Asia", Journal of Aging Studies, 15 (1): 13–26, doi:10.1016/S0890-4065(00)00014-1
Oh 1991, p. 50. Oh, Tai K. (February 1991), "Understanding Managerial Values and Behaviour among the Gang of Four: South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore and Hong Kong", Journal of Management Development, 10 (2): 46–56, doi:10.1108/02621719110141095
handle.net
hdl.handle.net
Ho 1994, p. 350. Ho, D. Y. F. (1994), "Filial Piety, Authoritarian Moralism and Cognitive Conservatism in Chinese Societies", Genetic, Social, and General Psychology Monographs, 120 (3): 349–65, hdl:10722/53184, ISSN8756-7547, PMID7926697
For the resistance to change and attitudes of superiority, see Kwan (2000, pp. 27, 34). For the other consequences, see Yee (2006). Ho (1994, p. 361) also describes the link with resistance to change, the learning attitudes, fatalism, dogmatism, authoritarianism and conformism. Kwan, K.L.K. (2000), "Counseling Chinese peoples: Perspectives of Filial Piety"(PDF), Asian Journal of Counseling, 7 (1): 23–41, archived from the original(PDF) on 2016-07-05, retrieved 2018-12-23 Yee, B.W.K. (2006), "Filial Piety", in Jackson, Y. (ed.), Encyclopedia of Multicultural Psychology, SAGE Publications, p. 214, ISBN978-1-4522-6556-8 Ho, D. Y. F. (1994), "Filial Piety, Authoritarian Moralism and Cognitive Conservatism in Chinese Societies", Genetic, Social, and General Psychology Monographs, 120 (3): 349–65, hdl:10722/53184, ISSN8756-7547, PMID7926697
Ho 1994, pp. 351–2, 362. Ho, D. Y. F. (1994), "Filial Piety, Authoritarian Moralism and Cognitive Conservatism in Chinese Societies", Genetic, Social, and General Psychology Monographs, 120 (3): 349–65, hdl:10722/53184, ISSN8756-7547, PMID7926697
Ho 1994, p. 361. Ho, D. Y. F. (1994), "Filial Piety, Authoritarian Moralism and Cognitive Conservatism in Chinese Societies", Genetic, Social, and General Psychology Monographs, 120 (3): 349–65, hdl:10722/53184, ISSN8756-7547, PMID7926697
Ho 1994, p. 350. Ho, D. Y. F. (1994), "Filial Piety, Authoritarian Moralism and Cognitive Conservatism in Chinese Societies", Genetic, Social, and General Psychology Monographs, 120 (3): 349–65, hdl:10722/53184, ISSN8756-7547, PMID7926697
For the resistance to change and attitudes of superiority, see Kwan (2000, pp. 27, 34). For the other consequences, see Yee (2006). Ho (1994, p. 361) also describes the link with resistance to change, the learning attitudes, fatalism, dogmatism, authoritarianism and conformism. Kwan, K.L.K. (2000), "Counseling Chinese peoples: Perspectives of Filial Piety"(PDF), Asian Journal of Counseling, 7 (1): 23–41, archived from the original(PDF) on 2016-07-05, retrieved 2018-12-23 Yee, B.W.K. (2006), "Filial Piety", in Jackson, Y. (ed.), Encyclopedia of Multicultural Psychology, SAGE Publications, p. 214, ISBN978-1-4522-6556-8 Ho, D. Y. F. (1994), "Filial Piety, Authoritarian Moralism and Cognitive Conservatism in Chinese Societies", Genetic, Social, and General Psychology Monographs, 120 (3): 349–65, hdl:10722/53184, ISSN8756-7547, PMID7926697
Ho 1994, pp. 351–2, 362. Ho, D. Y. F. (1994), "Filial Piety, Authoritarian Moralism and Cognitive Conservatism in Chinese Societies", Genetic, Social, and General Psychology Monographs, 120 (3): 349–65, hdl:10722/53184, ISSN8756-7547, PMID7926697
Ho 1994, p. 361. Ho, D. Y. F. (1994), "Filial Piety, Authoritarian Moralism and Cognitive Conservatism in Chinese Societies", Genetic, Social, and General Psychology Monographs, 120 (3): 349–65, hdl:10722/53184, ISSN8756-7547, PMID7926697
Truitt 2015, p. 292. Truitt, Allison (2015), "Not a Day but a Vu Lan Season: Celebrating Filial Piety in the Vietnamese Diaspora", Journal of Asian American Studies, 18 (3): 289–311, doi:10.1353/jaas.2015.0025, S2CID147509428
Ebrey, Patricia Buckley. "Paintings with political agendas". A Visual Sourcebook of Chinese Civilization. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 12 January 2012.
web.archive.org
Ebrey, Patricia Buckley. "Paintings with political agendas". A Visual Sourcebook of Chinese Civilization. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 12 January 2012.
Kwan 2000, p. 23, quote: "Xiao xun, the Chinese term for filial piety, commands the younger in the family to be respectful (i.e., xiao) and obedient (i.e., xun) to one's parents and other elderly members related to the family". Kwan, K.L.K. (2000), "Counseling Chinese peoples: Perspectives of Filial Piety"(PDF), Asian Journal of Counseling, 7 (1): 23–41, archived from the original(PDF) on 2016-07-05, retrieved 2018-12-23
For the resistance to change and attitudes of superiority, see Kwan (2000, pp. 27, 34). For the other consequences, see Yee (2006). Ho (1994, p. 361) also describes the link with resistance to change, the learning attitudes, fatalism, dogmatism, authoritarianism and conformism. Kwan, K.L.K. (2000), "Counseling Chinese peoples: Perspectives of Filial Piety"(PDF), Asian Journal of Counseling, 7 (1): 23–41, archived from the original(PDF) on 2016-07-05, retrieved 2018-12-23 Yee, B.W.K. (2006), "Filial Piety", in Jackson, Y. (ed.), Encyclopedia of Multicultural Psychology, SAGE Publications, p. 214, ISBN978-1-4522-6556-8 Ho, D. Y. F. (1994), "Filial Piety, Authoritarian Moralism and Cognitive Conservatism in Chinese Societies", Genetic, Social, and General Psychology Monographs, 120 (3): 349–65, hdl:10722/53184, ISSN8756-7547, PMID7926697
Knapp 2014, pp. 135–6, 141, 145. Knapp, K.N. (2014), "Chinese Filial Cannibalism: A Silk Road Import?", in Wong, D.C.; Heldt, Gusthav (eds.), China and Beyond in the Mediaeval Period: Cultural Crossings and Inter-regional Connections, Cambria Press, pp. 135–49, archived from the original on 2019-07-12, retrieved 2019-07-12
Ho 1994, p. 350. Ho, D. Y. F. (1994), "Filial Piety, Authoritarian Moralism and Cognitive Conservatism in Chinese Societies", Genetic, Social, and General Psychology Monographs, 120 (3): 349–65, hdl:10722/53184, ISSN8756-7547, PMID7926697
For the resistance to change and attitudes of superiority, see Kwan (2000, pp. 27, 34). For the other consequences, see Yee (2006). Ho (1994, p. 361) also describes the link with resistance to change, the learning attitudes, fatalism, dogmatism, authoritarianism and conformism. Kwan, K.L.K. (2000), "Counseling Chinese peoples: Perspectives of Filial Piety"(PDF), Asian Journal of Counseling, 7 (1): 23–41, archived from the original(PDF) on 2016-07-05, retrieved 2018-12-23 Yee, B.W.K. (2006), "Filial Piety", in Jackson, Y. (ed.), Encyclopedia of Multicultural Psychology, SAGE Publications, p. 214, ISBN978-1-4522-6556-8 Ho, D. Y. F. (1994), "Filial Piety, Authoritarian Moralism and Cognitive Conservatism in Chinese Societies", Genetic, Social, and General Psychology Monographs, 120 (3): 349–65, hdl:10722/53184, ISSN8756-7547, PMID7926697
Ho 1994, pp. 351–2, 362. Ho, D. Y. F. (1994), "Filial Piety, Authoritarian Moralism and Cognitive Conservatism in Chinese Societies", Genetic, Social, and General Psychology Monographs, 120 (3): 349–65, hdl:10722/53184, ISSN8756-7547, PMID7926697
Ho 1994, p. 361. Ho, D. Y. F. (1994), "Filial Piety, Authoritarian Moralism and Cognitive Conservatism in Chinese Societies", Genetic, Social, and General Psychology Monographs, 120 (3): 349–65, hdl:10722/53184, ISSN8756-7547, PMID7926697