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The Liu Kuo-sung Reader - Selected Texts on and by the Artist, 1950s–Present: Eugene Y. Wang, Valerie C. Doran, Alan C. Yeung The Liu Kuo-sung Reader - Selected Texts on and by the Artist, 1950s–Present
Eugene Y. Wang, Valerie C. Doran, Alan C. Yeung
R1,112 Discovery Miles 11 120 Ships in 12 - 19 working days
Writing and Materiality in China - Essays in Honor of Patrick Hanan (Hardcover): Judith T. Zeitlin, Lydia H. Liu Writing and Materiality in China - Essays in Honor of Patrick Hanan (Hardcover)
Judith T. Zeitlin, Lydia H. Liu; As told to Ellen Widmer; Contributions by Rania Huntington, Kathryn Lowry, …
R1,488 R1,341 Discovery Miles 13 410 Save R147 (10%) Ships in 12 - 19 working days

Speaking about Chinese writing entails thinking about how writing speaks through various media. In the guises of the written character and its imprints, traces, or ruins, writing is more than textuality. The goal of this volume is to consider the relationship of writing to materiality in China's literary history and to ponder the physical aspects of the production and circulation of writing. To speak of the thing-ness of writing is to understand it as a thing in constant motion, transported from one place or time to another, one genre or medium to another, one person or public to another.

Thinking about writing as the material product of a culture shifts the emphasis from the author as the creator and ultimate arbiter of a text's meaning to the editors, publishers, collectors, and readers through whose hands a text is reshaped, disseminated, and given new meanings. By yoking writing and materiality, the contributors to this volume aim to bypass the tendency to oppose form and content, words and things, documents and artifacts, to rethink key issues in the interpretation of Chinese literary and visual culture.

The Zoomorphic Imagination in Chinese Art and Culture (Hardcover): Jerome Silbergeld, Eugene Y. Wang The Zoomorphic Imagination in Chinese Art and Culture (Hardcover)
Jerome Silbergeld, Eugene Y. Wang
R2,404 R1,858 Discovery Miles 18 580 Save R546 (23%) Ships in 12 - 19 working days

China has an age-old zoomorphic tradition. The First Emperor was famously said to have had the heart of a tiger and a wolf. The names of foreign tribes were traditionally written with characters that included animal radicals. In modern times, the communistgovernment frequently referred to Nationalists as “running dogs,” and President Xi Jinping, vowing to quell corruption at all levels, pledged to capture both “the tigers” and “the flies.” Splendidly illustrated with works ranging from Bronze Age vessels to twentieth-century conceptual pieces, this volume is a wide-ranging look at zoomorphic and anthropomorphic imagery in Chinese art. The contributors, leading scholars in Chinese art history and related fields, consider depictions of animals not as simple, one-for-one symbolic equivalents: they pursue in depth, in complexity, and in multiple dimensions the ways that Chinese have used animals from earliest times to the present day to represent and rhetorically stage complex ideas about the world around them, examining what this means about China, past and present. In each chapter, a specific example or theme based on real or mythic creatures is derived from religious, political, or other sources, providing the detailed and learned examination needed to understand the means by which such imagery was embedded in Chinese cultural life. Bronze Age taotie motifs, calendrical animals, zoomorphic modes in Tantric Buddhist art, Song dragons and their painters, animal rebuses, Heaven-sent auspicious horses and foreign-sent tribute giraffes, the fantastic specimens depicted in the Qing Manual of Sea Oddities, the weirdly indeterminate creatures found in the contemporary art of Huang Yong Ping—these and other notable examples reveal Chinese attitudes over time toward the animal realm, exploreChinese psychology and patterns of imagination, and explain some of the critical means and motives of Chinese visual culture. The Zoomorphic Imagination in Chinese Art and Culture will find a ready audience among East Asian art and visual culture specialists and those with an interest in literary or visual rhetoric.

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