An exploratory study of the relationship between Lian and Mianzi behaviours in the workplace context

The Chinese concept of face consists of two components: lian and mianzi. Briefly, lian is related to a person’s morality, whereas mianzi is related to a person’s social reputation. The current study investigated the dynamics of Chinese face as separate components, examining the relationship betwe...

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Main Author: Ng, Elizabeth Wan Li
Other Authors: School of Humanities and Social Sciences
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2014
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/59758
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-597582019-12-10T14:02:14Z An exploratory study of the relationship between Lian and Mianzi behaviours in the workplace context Ng, Elizabeth Wan Li School of Humanities and Social Sciences Assistant Professor Olwen Bedford DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology The Chinese concept of face consists of two components: lian and mianzi. Briefly, lian is related to a person’s morality, whereas mianzi is related to a person’s social reputation. The current study investigated the dynamics of Chinese face as separate components, examining the relationship between lian and mianzi behaviours in the workplace. Employing a self- reported survey method, 76 Chinese adults working in Singapore (28 men and 48 women; Mage = 30.62, SD = 9.85) with an average of 8.31 years (SD = 10.18) of work experience, indicated their sensitivity to lian as measured by their adherence to Confucian workplace values, and their engagements in mianzi behaviours. An outlier was subsequently removed from all analyses. As hypothesized, the association between sensitivity to lian and mianzi behaviours in the workplace was shown to be positive and linear, r(75) = .41, p < .001. Furthermore, the results showed that the majority of participants adhered to Confucian workplace principles and also engaged in mianzi behaviours. Additional analyses on the effects of gender, age, and work experience on lian and mianzi behaviours were explored, and all three variables yielded nonsignificant results. The findings suggest that Confucianism still influences Overseas Chinese individuals’ value systems, and that those who closely follow Confucian values tend to engage in more mianzi behaviours. Non-Chinese managers and subordinates can benefit and work more effectively by learning about the Chinese concepts of face and their related behaviours. Bachelor of Arts 2014-05-14T02:44:01Z 2014-05-14T02:44:01Z 2014 2014 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/59758 en Nanyang Technological University 41 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology
Ng, Elizabeth Wan Li
An exploratory study of the relationship between Lian and Mianzi behaviours in the workplace context
description The Chinese concept of face consists of two components: lian and mianzi. Briefly, lian is related to a person’s morality, whereas mianzi is related to a person’s social reputation. The current study investigated the dynamics of Chinese face as separate components, examining the relationship between lian and mianzi behaviours in the workplace. Employing a self- reported survey method, 76 Chinese adults working in Singapore (28 men and 48 women; Mage = 30.62, SD = 9.85) with an average of 8.31 years (SD = 10.18) of work experience, indicated their sensitivity to lian as measured by their adherence to Confucian workplace values, and their engagements in mianzi behaviours. An outlier was subsequently removed from all analyses. As hypothesized, the association between sensitivity to lian and mianzi behaviours in the workplace was shown to be positive and linear, r(75) = .41, p < .001. Furthermore, the results showed that the majority of participants adhered to Confucian workplace principles and also engaged in mianzi behaviours. Additional analyses on the effects of gender, age, and work experience on lian and mianzi behaviours were explored, and all three variables yielded nonsignificant results. The findings suggest that Confucianism still influences Overseas Chinese individuals’ value systems, and that those who closely follow Confucian values tend to engage in more mianzi behaviours. Non-Chinese managers and subordinates can benefit and work more effectively by learning about the Chinese concepts of face and their related behaviours.
author2 School of Humanities and Social Sciences
author_facet School of Humanities and Social Sciences
Ng, Elizabeth Wan Li
format Final Year Project
author Ng, Elizabeth Wan Li
author_sort Ng, Elizabeth Wan Li
title An exploratory study of the relationship between Lian and Mianzi behaviours in the workplace context
title_short An exploratory study of the relationship between Lian and Mianzi behaviours in the workplace context
title_full An exploratory study of the relationship between Lian and Mianzi behaviours in the workplace context
title_fullStr An exploratory study of the relationship between Lian and Mianzi behaviours in the workplace context
title_full_unstemmed An exploratory study of the relationship between Lian and Mianzi behaviours in the workplace context
title_sort exploratory study of the relationship between lian and mianzi behaviours in the workplace context
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/59758
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