2018 ASIA 2607 Self and Society

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

2018 ASIA 2607 Self and Society ASIA 2607: Self and Society in Pre-modern Chinese Literature MWF 12:10-1:00 Furman Hall 007 Office Hours: Wed 1:45-3:45 Buttrick 260 Prof. Guojun Wang ([email protected]) (Prior knowledge of Chinese language or literature is NOT required) Course Description: What is the Chinese tradition? What is the traditional China? How can such a millennia-long civilization enrich our experience as individual persons in modern society? Through reading Chinese literature, we will together explore these questions. In this course, you will learn about the major intellectual traditions, literary texts, and authors in pre-modern China (ca. 17th century BCE to 20th century CE). The readings follow a chronological order, but in each period we focus on some particular themes revolving around self and society. In turn we will discuss early writings on man and nature, the birth of the poetic self, China as an open empire, Chinese ethnicity, vernacular literature and commercial culture, and the modern view of the Chinese tradition. Through this course, you will become familiar with China’s intellectual traditions and literary history, hone your skills of close reading, and learn to think and write critically. ASIA 2607 Self and Society in Pre-modern Chinese Literature 2 Class meets three times a week. MW meetings usually include a 30-minute lecture followed by a 20-minute discussion. Friday meetings are usually discussion sessions. The readings for each class average about 25 pages (I will designate sections to focus on if more readings are assigned). All readings are in English. Class is taught in English. No prerequisite. Readings No textbook. All readings are available as E-books at VU library or PDF files on Brightspace. • Mair, Victor H. The shorter Columbia anthology of traditional Chinese literature. Columbia University Press, 2000. (E-book at VU library; abbr. Mair, Columbia Anthology) http://proxy.library.vanderbilt.edu/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?dire ct=true&db=nlebk&AN=74644&site=ehost-live&scope=site&ebv=EB&ppid=pp_Cover • Mair, Victor H., ed. The Columbia history of Chinese literature. Columbia University Press, 2010. (E-book at VU library) http://proxy.library.vanderbilt.edu/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?dire ct=true&db=nlebk&AN=461157&site=ehost-live&scope=site&ebv=EB&ppid=pp_Cover • Ivanhoe, Philip J., and Bryan W. Van Norden, eds. Readings in classical Chinese philosophy. New York: Seven Bridges Press. 2001. http://proxy.library.vanderbilt.edu/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?dire ct=true&db=nlebk&AN=64064&site=ehost-live&scope=site&ebv=EB&ppid=pp_cover • Owen, Stephen, ed. An anthology of Chinese literature: beginnings to 1911. New York: W.W. Norton, 1996. [abbr. Owen, Anthology; excerpts provided] • Wu, Cheng’en. The Monkey & the Monk: a Revised Abridgment of The Journey to the West. Translated by Anthony C Yu. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2006. Requirements: 1) Class Participation: All weekly readings are due before class. We will frequently refer to the texts in class, especially during the discussion, so you should bring the readings to class in electronic or printed forms. Active participation in class discussion is very important. Please come to class with questions and opinions about the readings. 2) Online Posting: Please submit a post about that day’s readings in the discussion section on Brightspace by 9:00 am before class at least once every week for at least 12 weeks. Your post must be one of three types: a question about some problem in the primary reading (specify page numbers); a clarification question about difficult or confusing parts of the primary texts (explain why it’s difficult); response to other students’ posts. Late posts do NOT count because we won’t have time to read them before class. 3) Presentation: You will work in groups to do a presentation and lead a discussion session on assigned topics. ASIA 2607 Self and Society in Pre-modern Chinese Literature 3 4) Paper: Written requirements include one 4-5-page paper. Paper will be graded on originality, compelling argumentation, and clarity of style. I will provide rubrics for paper writing later in class. Late papers are NOT accepted. If you need an extension, please contact me in advance. Extensions are given with higher expectations. 5) Final Project: You will work in groups to create a series of online-exhibits/webpages through Story Maps (https://storymaps.arcgis.com/en), a product of ArcGis. I will invite a librarian to introduce the software. The theme can be “The World of xxx [an author]” or something of your choice. You will explore the life and writings of a historical person as well as the society he/she lived in. The final projects include a webpage, a group presentation, and individual reflection essays (1-2 pages). 6) Absent Policy: You are allowed two unexcused absences for the semester. Beyond that, you will need to contact me in advance and provide verifiable excuses for absence to avoid losing grade. 7) Computer Policy: Electronic devices (computers and phones) are allowed in class ONLY for reading and note taking. Non-class-related activities such as texting and web-surfing are prohibited. NB: Instead of the short essays and final project, graduate and professional school students will write a 20-25-page research paper. There will also be additional secondary readings based on your specific interests. All the other requirements and grading scheme apply to graduate students. Grading: A 94-100 In-class participation: 15% A- 90-93 Online Posting: 15% B+ 87-89 Presentation and leading discussion: 20%; B 84-86 Paper: 20% B- 80-83 Final Project: 30% C+ 77-79 C 74-76 Honor Code: The Vanderbilt Honor Code governs all work done in C- 70-73 this class. For more information, visit D 60-69 http://www.owen.vanderbilt.edu/about-us/honor-code.cfm F 0-60 Class Schedule and Readings: (readings with * are optional) Part I Early China: between Heaven and Earth The written history of China (since ca. 17th century BCE) started with contemplating the relations between heaven, earth, and humans as social and emotional beings. In the first section, we explore these earliest thoughts and literary forms. Week 1 ASIA 2607 Self and Society in Pre-modern Chinese Literature 4 8/22 Introduction: a story of my China trip 8/24 Words from Heaven and the Sage Kings • Selections from The Classic of Documents (PDF Legge, Classic of Documents) • “The Oracle-Bone Inscriptions of the Late Shang Dynasty” (PDF Keightley, Oracle Bones) Week 2 Two Earliest Canons of Chinese Literature 8/27 Classic of Poetry: Songs of Love and Power • Selections from the Classic of Poetry, Owen, Anthology (PDF Classic of Poetry) * Jeffrey Riegel, “Shih-ching poetry and didacticism in ancient Chinese literature,” in Columbia History of Chinese Literature (PDF Riegel, Shih-ching poetry) 8/29 Shamanism in the Chuci: Lyric of Chu • “Li Sao,” “Nine Songs,” in Owen, Anthology, 155-175 (PDF Lyric of Chu) 8/31 Session Week 3 Two Sources of Chinese Philosophy 9/3 The Confucian Concept of Person and Writing • Selected writings by Confucius and Mengzi, from Readings in Classical Chinese Philosophy (VU E-book, pp. 1-13, 111-115, 127-133) 9/5 The Daoist Philosophers • Selected writings by Laozi and Zhuangzi, from Readings in Classical Chinese Philosophy (VU E-book, pp. 157-177, 203-209, 219-220) 9/7 Session: excerpt of film Confucius; Confucianism in contemporary China Week 4 Religion and Philosophy in Practice 9/10 The Coming of Buddhism • “The Introduction of Buddhism,” in Sources of Chinese Tradition (PDF Introduction of Buddhism) • * “Buddhist Literature,” in Columbia History of Chinese Literature (E-book, pp. 160-172) 9/12 The Neo-Daoist Cultivation • “Discourse on Nourishing Life,” “Rhapsody on Whistling,” in Mair, Columbia Anthology, 359-363, 229-235. • Additional readings on the Seven Sages of the Bamboo Grove (PDF Bamboo Grove) 9/14 Session: clash of ideas • Han Yu, “Memorial on the Bone of the Buddha” (PDF Han Yu, Bone of the Buddha) • Debate in class ASIA 2607 Self and Society in Pre-modern Chinese Literature 5 Week 5 Writing Fragile Life 9/17 The Grand Scribe and Historical Writing • Selections from Sima Qian, Historical Records, in Owen, Anthology (PDF Sima Qian, Historical Records) 9/19 Parting, Longing, and love suicide • The “Nineteen Old Poems” and other poems, in Owen, Anthology, 249-261 (PDF Nineteen Old Poems) • “Southeast Fly the Peacocks,” translated by Hans H. Frankel (PDF Frankel, Southeast Fly the Peacocks) 9/21 Session Week 6 Humans, Ghosts, and Spirits 9/24 In Search of Spirits • Excerpts from Gan Bao, In Search of Spirits (PDF Gan Bao, In Search of Spirits) 9/26 Peach Blossom Spring (The Chinese Utopia) • Tao Yuanming, “The Peach Blossom Spring,” in Mair, Columbia Anthology, 364-366. • Other writings by Tao Yuanming • In-class screening: “A Tale of the Fountain of the Peach Blossom Spring” (animation on Youtube, 15 minutes, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iEJ-0SxADI8) 9/28 Session: Review and discussion Paper proposal due at midnight Part II From Open Empire to Chinese State The Tang and Song dynasties (618-1279) is considered the apogee of Chinese history and literature. The Tang China had the only female Emperor in Chinese history, it embraced Buddhism and Christianity, its capital hosted tens of thousands of foreigners, and its imperial examination system nourished Confucian scholars as well as poets and fiction writers. By the Song dynasty, the dwellers of central China for the first time pronounced their ethnic identity as Han Chinese against the military threats from the northern “barbarians.” Together with this emerging identity, we see new thoughts about Confucianism and new genres of literature.
Recommended publications
  • Images of Women in Chinese Literature. Volume 1. REPORT NO ISBN-1-880938-008 PUB DATE 94 NOTE 240P
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 385 489 SO 025 360 AUTHOR Yu-ning, Li, Ed. TITLE Images of Women in Chinese Literature. Volume 1. REPORT NO ISBN-1-880938-008 PUB DATE 94 NOTE 240p. AVAILABLE FROM Johnson & Associates, 257 East South St., Franklin, IN 46131-2422 (paperback: $25; clothbound: ISBN-1-880938-008, $39; shipping: $3 first copy, $0.50 each additional copy). PUB TYPE Books (010) Reports Descriptive (141) EDRS PRICE MF01/PC10 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS *Chinese Culture; *Cultural Images; Females; Folk Culture; Foreign Countries; Legends; Mythology; Role Perception; Sexism in Language; Sex Role; *Sex Stereotypes; Sexual Identity; *Womens Studies; World History; *World Literature IDENTIFIERS *Asian Culture; China; '`Chinese Literature ABSTRACT This book examines the ways in which Chinese literature offers a vast array of prospects, new interpretations, new fields of study, and new themes for the study of women. As a result of the global movement toward greater recognition of gender equality and human dignity, the study of women as portrayed in Chinese literature has a long and rich history. A single volume cannot cover the enormous field but offers volume is a starting point for further research. Several renowned Chinese writers and researchers contributed to the book. The volume includes the following: (1) Introduction (Li Yu- Wing);(2) Concepts of Redemption and Fall through Woman as Reflected in Chinese Literature (Tsung Su);(3) The Poems of Li Qingzhao (1084-1141) (Kai-yu Hsu); (4) Images of Women in Yuan Drama (Fan Pen Chen);(5) The Vanguards--The Truncated Stage (The Women of Lu Yin, Bing Xin, and Ding Ling) (Liu Nienling); (6) New Woman vs.
    [Show full text]
  • Downloaded 4.0 License
    Return to an Inner Utopia 119 Chapter 4 Return to an Inner Utopia In what was to become a celebrated act in Chinese literary history, Su Shi be- gan systematically composing “matching Tao” (he Tao 和陶) poems in the spring of 1095, during his period of exile in Huizhou. This project of 109 poems was completed when he was further exiled to Danzhou. It was issued in four fascicles, shortly after his return to the mainland in 1100.1 Inspired by and fol- lowing the rhyming patterns of the poetry of Tao Qian, these poems contrib- uted to the making (and remaking) of the images of both poets, as well as a return to simplicity in Chinese lyrical aesthetics.2 Thus far, scholarship has focused on the significance of Su Shi’s agency in Tao Qian’s canonisation. His image was transformed through Su’s criticism and emulation: Tao came to be viewed as a spontaneous Man of the Way and not just an eccentric medieval recluse and hearty drinker.3 In other words, Tao Qian’s ‘spontaneity’ was only created retrospectively in lament over its loss. The unattainability of the ideal is part and parcel of its worth. In this chapter, I will further examine what Su Shi’s practice meant for Su Shi himself. I argue that Su Shi’s active transformation of and identification with Tao Qian’s image were driven by the purpose of overcoming the tyranny of despair, deprivation and mortality. The apparent serenity of the “matching Tao” poems was therefore fundamentally paradoxical, a result of self-persua- sion.
    [Show full text]
  • The Poetry of Zhai Yongming 翟永明 1982-1995
    The Poetry of Zhai Yongming 翟永明 1982-1995 Zhai Yongming was born in Chengdu, Sichuan province, in 1955. She as one of the instigators of the “Black Tornado” of woman’s poetry that swept China’s poetry scene in 1986-1989. This came about as a reaction among other woman poets to the official publication of poems from her series <Woman> and other poems during this period. In fact, <Woman> was written in 1984, and poems in the series appeared in Sichuan’s unofficial poetry journals and others outside the province in 1985. The series was officially published in book form (with other poems) in 1989. Since the 1980s, Zhai has maintained a position as one of China’s most prominent poets, being a frequent guest at conferences and festivals in Europe and North America since spending over a year travelling in the West with her then artist-husband in the early 1990s. 1) I Have a Broom [ 我有了一把扫帚] 2) Woman [ 女人] I. #1 A Premonition [ 预感] II. #3 An Instant [ 瞬间] III. #6 The World [ 世界] IV. #7 Mother [ 母亲] V. #9 Anticipation [ 憧憬] VI. #10 Nightmare [ 噩梦] VII. #11 Monologue [ 独白] VIII. #14 July [ 七月] IX. #17 Human Life [ 人生] X. #18 Silence [ 沉默] XI. #20 The Finish [ 结束] 3) Peaceful Village [ 静安庄] I. The First Month [ 第一月] II. The Seventh Month [ 第七月] III. The Twelfth Month [ 第十二月] 4) The Black Room [ 黑房间] 5) At This Very Moment [ 此时此刻] 6) The Red Room [红房间] 7) You've Cut Off My Hair [ 头发被你剪去] 8) Landlord! Landlord! [ 房东!!!房东!房东!!!] 9) Death's Design [ 死亡的图案] I.
    [Show full text]
  • Thatched Cottage in a Fallen City the Poetics and Sociology of Survival Under the Occupation
    European Journal European Journal of of East Asian Studies 19 (2020) 209–236 East Asian Studies brill.com/ejea Thatched Cottage in a Fallen City The Poetics and Sociology of Survival under the Occupation Zhiyi Yang Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany [email protected] Abstract This article examines the construction of lyric identities by Li Xuanti, a classical- style poet, cultural celebrity and prominent civil servant in collaborationist regimes based in Nanjing during the Second Sino-Japanese War. It argues that Li used his poetry to explore the confusion, ambivalence and sense of cultural pride while liv- ing with the occupiers. Despite his collaboration, a frequent identity that appears in Li’s poetry is that of a yimin (loyalist), who has retreated to the inner world of reclu- sion. With the progress of the war, however, another identity eventually emerged in Li’s poetry, namely that of a patriot. Historical allusions in Li’s poems thus acquire double- entendre, expressing his ambivalent loyalty. Li was also at the social centre of a group of like-minded collaborators and accommodators in Nanjing, bound by their common practice of classical-style poetry and arts.Their community thus becomes a special case of study for the sociology of survival under the Japanese occupation. Keywords Li Xuanti – collaboration – accommodation – Japanese occupation – classical-style Chinese poetry – Second Sino-Japanese War In September 1940, Li Xuanti 李宣倜 (1888–1961), chief of the Bureau of Engrav- ing and Printing in the collaborationist Reorganised National Government (rng) in Nanjing, was awarded a vacant two-storey house in the Three-Steps- Two-Bridges (Sanbu liangqiao 三步兩橋) residential quarter.
    [Show full text]
  • Envisioning Morality in Times of Dynastic Change Huan Jin Washington University in St
    Washington University in St. Louis Washington University Open Scholarship All Theses and Dissertations (ETDs) January 2010 Envisioning Morality in Times of Dynastic Change Huan Jin Washington University in St. Louis Follow this and additional works at: https://openscholarship.wustl.edu/etd Recommended Citation Jin, Huan, "Envisioning Morality in Times of Dynastic Change" (2010). All Theses and Dissertations (ETDs). 519. https://openscholarship.wustl.edu/etd/519 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by Washington University Open Scholarship. It has been accepted for inclusion in All Theses and Dissertations (ETDs) by an authorized administrator of Washington University Open Scholarship. For more information, please contact [email protected]. WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY Department of Asian and Near Eastern Languages and Literatures ENVISIONING MORALITY IN TIMES OF DYNASTIC CHANGE - A STUDY OF PIPA JI AND TAOHUA SHAN by JIN Huan A thesis presented to the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences of Washington University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts May 2010 Saint Louis, Missouri Acknowledgements It is a pleasure to thank those who made this thesis possible. I owe my deepest gratitude to my Master Adviser, Professor Robert Hegel. With his inspiration and patience, and his great efforts to guide me through academic thinking and writing in the study of Chinese Literature, he helped to give me a firm grasp of the field, and made my days in Washington University a fun and rewarding journey. I would have been lost without him. Professor Steven Miles and Professor Lingchei Letty Chen deserve special thanks as my thesis committee members.
    [Show full text]
  • Utopia and Utopianism in the Contemporary Chinese Context
    Utopia and Utopianism in the Contemporary Chinese Context Texts, Ideas, Spaces Edited by David Der-wei Wang, Angela Ki Che Leung, and Zhang Yinde This publication has been generously supported by the Hong Kong Institute for the Humanities and Social Sciences. Hong Kong University Press The University of Hong Kong Pokfulam Road Hong Kong https://hkupress.hku.hk © 2020 Hong Kong University Press ISBN 978-988-8528-36-3 (Hardback) All rights reserved. No portion of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any informa- tion storage or retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publisher. British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Printed and bound by Paramount Printing Co., Ltd. in Hong Kong, China Contents Preface vii David Der-wei Wang Prologue 1 The Formation and Evolution of the Concept of State in Chinese Culture Cho-yun Hsu (許倬雲) (University of Pittsburgh) Part I. Discourses 1. Imagining “All under Heaven”: The Political, Intellectual, and Academic Background of a New Utopia 15 Ge Zhaoguang (葛兆光) (Fudan University, Shanghai) (Translated by Michael Duke and Josephine Chiu-Duke) 2. Liberalism and Utopianism in the New Culture Movement: Case Studies of Chen Duxiu and Hu Shi 36 Peter Zarrow (沙培德) (University of Connecticut, USA) 3. The Panglossian Dream and Dark Consciouscness: Modern Chinese Literature and Utopia 53 David Der-wei Wang (王德威) (Harvard University, USA) Part II.
    [Show full text]
  • Reading Huang Zunxian's
    The Geographic Measure of Traditonal Poetic Discourse 鄭毓瑜︰舊詩語的地理尺度︰ 以黃遵憲《日本雜事詩》中的典故運用為例 The Geographic Measure of Traditional Poetic Discourse: Reading Huang Zunxian’s ‘Poems on Miscellaneous Subjects from Japan’ By Cheng Yu-yu Translated by Jack W. Chen and Yunshuang Zhang 1. Traditional Poetic Discourse and Modern Subject Matters IN REGARD TO Huang Zunxian’s literary writings, it is tempting to understand his work purely from within an intellectual historical context. The famed writer and critic Zhou Zuoren 周作人 (1885–1967) asserted that, in reading the Poems on Miscellaneous Subjects 日本雜事詩, ‘it is not of primary importance to treat these as poems—I feel that what is most important is to focus on the author’s thinking, and what is secondary is to consider the poems as a record of Japanese subject matter’1 Both Zhou’s emphasis on the writer’s thinking (sixiang 思想) and his account of ‘Japanese subject matter’ (Riben shiwu 日本事物), situate Huang’s poetry within the question of tradition vs modernity, which was a major theme for late Qing writers. Similarly, many of Huang’s contemporaries, including the eminent Liang Qichao 梁啟超 (1873–1929), understood his poetry as history, writing on one occasion that a poem by Huang was ‘a fragment of history’, and ‘those who read this can all reflect upon themselves—how could this be a poem [intended] only for [other] poets!’ 2 If Liang hoped to elevate Huang beyond the realm of pure 1 See Zhou Zuoren, ‘Riben zashi shi’ 日本雜事詩, in Fengyu tan 風雨談 (Shijiazhuang: Hebei jiaoyu chubanshe, 2001), 104. 2 See Liang Qichao, ‘Yinbing shi shihua’ 飲冰室詩話, in Yinbing shi wenji 飲冰室文集, v (Beijing: Zhonghua shuju, 2003), 20.
    [Show full text]
  • Su Shi's Transformation of Tao Qian in His Exile Poetry
    T’OUNGT’OUNG PAO PAO ZhiyiT’oung Yang /Pao T’oung 99-4-5 Pao (2013) 99 (2013) 329-378 329-378 brill.com/tpao329 ISSN 0082-5433 (print version) ISSN 1568-5322 (online version) TPAO Return to an Inner Utopia: Su Shi’s Transformation of Tao Qian in His Exile Poetry Zhiyi Yang (Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main) Abstract This article examines Su Shi’s systematic matching of Tao Qian’s poetry during his last periods of exile to the far south. Su understood the aesthetic features of Tao’s poetry as having an ethical dimension. Through emulation of Tao Qian, Su Shi reinterpreted his exile to be a result of his natural inclinations, just like Tao’s reclusion, and even as a felicitous condition for his “return” to an original state of authenticity and spontaneity. By assuming certain agency for his suffering, Su Shi claimed control over his fate and reasserted his freedom of choice. Meanwhile, his poetry betrays a sense of anxiety and dislocation in his natural and cultural habitats, as well as alienation from the political center. As a result, he reimagined Tao Qian’s “Peach Blossom Spring” to be an inner utopia. His return into this inner realm was further informed by Daoist alchemical practices and contained esoteric features. Résumé Cet article s’intéresse à la façon systématique dont Su Shi a composé des poèmes à l’imitation de ceux de Tao Qian pendant ses dernières périodes d’exil dans l’extrême- Sud. Pour lui, les propriétés esthétiques de la poésie de Tao Qian avaient une dimension éthique.
    [Show full text]
  • Chronology of Shitao's Life
    SHITAO APPENDIX ONE Chronology of Shitao's Life References are given here only for information that is not 6r), as the Shunzhi emperor, accompanied by the appoint- presented elsewhere in this book in fuller form (especially ment of Hong Taiji's younger brother, Dorgon (r 6r 2-50), in Chapters 4-6) and accessible through the index. Here, as regent. as throughout this study, years refer to Chinese lunar years. Most of the places mentioned can be found on r644 Map 3. Where an existing artwork contradicts the dates Fall of Beijing to the Shun regime of Li Zicheng, followed given here for the use of specific signatures and seals, this shortly after by their abandonment of Beijing to Qing will generally mean that I am not convinced of the work's forces. Dorgon proclaimed Qing rule over China in the authenticity (though there will inevitably be cases of over- name of the Shunzhi emperor, who shortly after was sight or ignorance as well). With the existence and loca- brought to Beijing. In south China, resistance to the Man- tion in mainland Chinese libraries of rare publications chus crystallized around different claimants to the Ming and manuscripts by no less than thirty-six of his friends throne, whose regimes are collectively known as the and acquaintances newly established, providing a rich Southern Ming. new vein for biographical research, and with new works by Shitao regularly coming to light, this chronology must r645 be considered provisional) Fall of Nanjing to Qing forces. In Guilin in the ninth r642 month, Zhu Hengjia was attacked and defeated by forces of the Southern Ming Longwu emperor, Zhu Yujian, Shitao was born into the family of the Ming princes of under the command of Qu Shisi, and taken to Fuzhou, Jingjiang, under the name of Zhu Ruoji.
    [Show full text]
  • Yishu 60 Web.Pdf
    JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2014 VOLUME 13, N UMBER 1 INSI DE The Fourth Yishu Awards for Critical Writing of Contemporary Chinese Art: Cui Cancan, Anthony Yung Interview with Slavs and Tatars Features: Hu Xiangqian, Li Mu, Zhang Enli, Li Songsong, Xu Bing US$12.00 NT$350.00 PRINTED IN TAIWAN 14 VOLUME 13, NUMBER 1, JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2014 CONTENTS 2 Editor’s Note 22 4 Contributors 6 The Fourth Yishu Awards for Critical Writing on Contemporary Chinese Art 8 The Incident: Inciting a Revolution in Art Cui Cancan 14 Hu Xiangqian: Superfluous Knowledge 36 Anthony Yung 22 Village Collection: On Li Mu’s Qiuzhuang Project Jesse Birch 36 Syncretic Cartographies: A Conversation with Slavs and Tatars Stephanie Bailey 50 50 Zhang Enli’s Space Painting Victor Wang 60 Li Songsong: Conflicts of the In-Between Voon Pow Bartlett 76 Xu Bing’s Magical Mystery Tour Patricia Eichenbaum Karetzky 93 Chinese Name Index 60 76 Cover: Hu Xiangqian, Xiangqian Museum, 2010, performance at Taikang Space, Beijing. Courtesy of the artist. We thank JNBY Art Projects, Canadian Foundation of Asian Art, Chen Ping, Mr. and Mrs. Eric Li, and Stephanie Holmquist and Mark Allison for their generous contribution to the publication and distribution of Yishu. Vol. 13 No. 1 1 Editor’s Note YISHU: Journal of Contemporary Chinese Art PRESIDENT Katy Hsiu-chih Chien LEGAL COUNSEL Infoshare Tech Law Office, Mann C. C. Liu Yishu 60 opens with texts by recipients of the FOUNDING EDITOR Ken Lum Fourth Yishu Awards for Critical Writing on EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Keith Wallace Contemporary Chinese Art.
    [Show full text]
  • History As Meta-Theater Allison Bernard Deposit Draft 5/16
    History as Meta-Theater: Kong Shangren's (1648-1718) The Peach Blossom Fan Allison E. Bernard Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2019 © 2019 Allison E. Bernard All rights reserved ABSTRACT History as Meta-Theater: Kong Shangren’s (1648-1718) The Peach Blossom Fan Allison E. Bernard This dissertation examines the uses of meta-theater in The Peach Blossom Fan, an early Qing historical drama by Kong Shangren (1648-1718), arguing that the meta-theatrical elements of the play serve as an innovative form of historiography. Kong Shangren, a member of the Confucian Kong lineage, is unusual for a Chinese playwright: he was steeped more deeply in the world of Confucian ritual music than the work of writing lyrics for dramatic arias, yet The Peach Blossom Fan is recognized as one of the last great chuanqi dramas of the Ming-Qing period. Kong wrote at a time of great social and cultural transformation, completing The Peach Blossom Fan not long after the violent conflicts of the mid-17th century Ming-Qing dynastic transition were finally coming to an end. At the same time, the literary genre of chuanqi drama was also in the midst of its own transitions, as writers of the early Qing increasingly turned to other literary genres beyond this popular late Ming form. I argue that The Peach Blossom Fan marks a key transition in the development of the chuanqi drama, owing both to the play’s formal innovations that exceed the traditional chuanqi form, such as its rejection of the conventional “grand reunion” finale and re-envisioning of the role-type system, and also to its synthesis of historiographical judgements with the world of theatrical performance.
    [Show full text]
  • UC San Diego UC San Diego Electronic Theses and Dissertations
    UC San Diego UC San Diego Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title Trans-media strategies of appropriation, narrativization, and visualization : adaptations of literature in a century of Chinese cinema Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5vd0s09p Author Qin, Liyan Publication Date 2007 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN DIEGO Trans-media Strategies of Appropriation, Narrativization, and Visualization: Adaptations of Literature in a Century of Chinese Cinema A Dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in Literature by Liyan Qin Committee in charge Professor Yingjin Zhang, Chair Professor Michael Davidson Professor Jin-kyung Lee Professor Paul Pickowicz Professor Wai-lim Yip 2007 The Dissertation of Liyan Qin is approved, and it is acceptable in quality and form for publication on microfilm: Chair University of California, San Diego 2007 iii TABLE OF CONTENTS Signature Page………………………………………………………………………. …..iii Table of Contents……………………………………………………………………. …..iv Acknowledgements……………………………………………………………………...vii Vita……………………………………………………………………………………...viii Abstract……………………………………………………………………………...........ix Chapter 1 Introduction: The Concept of “Adaptation” and its Vicissitude in China……………………………………………………………………………………...1 Situating my Position in Current Scholarships………………………………….........3 The Intertwining of Chinese Film and Literature…………………………………...16 “Fidelity,”
    [Show full text]