Heritage as Civic Pedagogy: Affective Governance and Ritual Learning in Post-Socialist Hanoi

Authors

  • Quoc Viet Tran Institute of Hanoi Studies and International Education, Hanoi Metropolitan University, 98 Duong Duong Quang Ham, Phuong Quan Hoa, Quan Cau Giay, Ha Noi 100000, Vietnam
  • Thi Thanh Hoa Nguyen Institute of Hanoi Studies and International Education, Hanoi Metropolitan University, 98 Duong Duong Quang Ham, Phuong Quan Hoa, Quan Cau Giay, Ha Noi 100000, Vietnam
  • Van Tuan Bui Institute of Hanoi Studies and International Education, Hanoi Metropolitan University, 98 Duong Duong Quang Ham, Phuong Quan Hoa, Quan Cau Giay, Ha Noi 100000, Vietnam
  • Van Phuong Nguyen Institute of Hanoi Studies and International Education, Hanoi Metropolitan University, 98 Duong Duong Quang Ham, Phuong Quan Hoa, Quan Cau Giay, Ha Noi 100000, Vietnam
  • Thi Anh Tuyet Dang Institute of Hanoi Studies and International Education, Hanoi Metropolitan University, 98 Duong Duong Quang Ham, Phuong Quan Hoa, Quan Cau Giay, Ha Noi 100000, Vietnam

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15503/jecs2026.1.913.926

Keywords:

civic education, affect and heritage, emotional pedagogy, post-socialism, Temple of Literature

Abstract

Aim. This article examines how heritage functions as a mode of civic learning in post-socialist Vietnam through an ethnographic study of the Temple of Literature in Hanoi. Rather than treating heritage as a passive site of remembrance, the study explores how ritual atmospheres, embodied conduct, and affective coordination quietly train people to sense what is appropriate, trustworthy, and morally shared within rapidly transforming urban life.

Methods. The research draws on twelve months of ethnographic fieldwork conducted between 2023 and 2024, combining participant observation, affective fieldnotes, emotional diaries, on-site recordings, and thirty-five semi-structured interviews with students, teachers, pilgrims, guides, and heritage staff. Analysis focused on affective rhythms, embodied adjustments, and moments where emotion organized moral recognition before explicit interpretation emerged.

Results. The findings identify three interrelated mechanisms of civic learning. First, visitors learn embodied discipline through silence, slowed movement, and self-regulated conduct. Second, collective attunement emerges through shared affective adjustments that align strangers without direct instruction. Third, ethical reflexivity develops as individuals continue to participate in ritual practices while remaining simultaneously aware, uncertain, and reflective about belief itself. Together, these processes enable heritage to operate as a moral infrastructure that stabilizes forms of civic coexistence under post-socialist conditions of social acceleration and uncertainty.

Conclusions. The study argues that heritage functions not only as cultural memory but as an affective technology through which civic sensibilities are continuously recalibrated. This perspective repositions civic learning beyond institutional education and suggests that moral life may be sustained through shared atmospheres, ritual rhythms, and everyday practices of affective coordination.

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Author Biographies

  • Quoc Viet Tran, Institute of Hanoi Studies and International Education, Hanoi Metropolitan University, 98 Duong Duong Quang Ham, Phuong Quan Hoa, Quan Cau Giay, Ha Noi 100000, Vietnam

    Dr. Tran Quoc Viet is a senior lecturer and cultural researcher at the Hanoi Metropolitan University. He has published extensively in peer-reviewed international journals and authored several monographs on the culture and music of Vietnam’s ethnic minority communities. His research adopts an interdisciplinary orientation, engaging with posthumanist theory, post-industrial cultural industries, postcolonial heritage, indigenous religion, embodied education, and cultural restructuring amid urban and rural transitions.

  • Thi Thanh Hoa Nguyen, Institute of Hanoi Studies and International Education, Hanoi Metropolitan University, 98 Duong Duong Quang Ham, Phuong Quan Hoa, Quan Cau Giay, Ha Noi 100000, Vietnam

    A lecturer and researcher at the Institute of Hanoi Studies and International Education, Hanoi Metropolitan University, Vietnam. Her academic interests include Vietnamese cultural heritage, heritage education, and community-based tourism. 

  • Van Tuan Bui, Institute of Hanoi Studies and International Education, Hanoi Metropolitan University, 98 Duong Duong Quang Ham, Phuong Quan Hoa, Quan Cau Giay, Ha Noi 100000, Vietnam

    A lecturer and researcher at the Institute of Hanoi Studies and International Education, Hanoi Metropolitan University, Vietnam. His research covers heritage conservation, urban cultural studies, and sustainable tourism development. 

  • Van Phuong Nguyen, Institute of Hanoi Studies and International Education, Hanoi Metropolitan University, 98 Duong Duong Quang Ham, Phuong Quan Hoa, Quan Cau Giay, Ha Noi 100000, Vietnam

    A lecturer and researcher at the Institute of Hanoi Studies and International Education, Hanoi Metropolitan University, Vietnam. His work focuses on Hanoi’s cultural history, Confucian heritage, and educational heritage sites. 

  • Thi Anh Tuyet Dang, Institute of Hanoi Studies and International Education, Hanoi Metropolitan University, 98 Duong Duong Quang Ham, Phuong Quan Hoa, Quan Cau Giay, Ha Noi 100000, Vietnam

    A lecturer and researcher at the Institute of Hanoi Studies and International Education, Hanoi Metropolitan University, Vietnam. Her research focuses on heritage interpretation, local history, and cultural identity.

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Published

2026-06-27

How to Cite

Tran, Q. V., Nguyen, T. T. H., Bui, V. T., Nguyen, V. P., & Dang, T. A. T. (2026). Heritage as Civic Pedagogy: Affective Governance and Ritual Learning in Post-Socialist Hanoi. Journal of Education Culture and Society, 17(1), 913-926. https://doi.org/10.15503/jecs2026.1.913.926