Date | 2008 |
Publish_location | Cambridge, MA |
Publisher | Harvard University Press |
Collection | Ricci Institute Library [ASCC] |
Edition | |
Language | English |
Record_type | Book |
Series | Wonders of the world (Cambridge, Mass.) |
Shelf | Dir. Office Gallery North |
Call Number | DS795.8.F67 B37 2008 |
Description | xxxi, 251 p. : ill., maps ; 20 cm. |
Note | The Forbidden City / Geremie R. Barmé. "First published in the United Kingdom by Profile Books ... London." Includes bibliographical references and index. A palace of blood and tears -- The architecture of hierarchy -- Rise and decline -- A day in the reign -- The dowager -- Within and without the palace -- Three hundred years on -- The banquet of history. "The Forbidden City (Zijin Cheng) lying at the heart of Beijing formed the hub of the Celestial Empire for five centuries. Over the past century it has led a reduced life as the refuge for a deposed emperor, as well as a heritage museum for monarchist, republican, and socialist citizens, and it has been celebrated and excoriated as a symbol of all that was magnificent and terrible in dynastic China s legacy." "The Forbidden City's vermilion walls have fueled literary fantasies that have become an intrinsic part of its disputed and documented history. Mao Zedong even considered razing the entire structure to make way for the buildings of a new socialist China. The fictions surrounding the Forbidden City have also had an international reach, and writers like Franz Kafka, Elias Canetti, Jorge Luis Borges, and Mervyn Peake have all succumbed to its myths. The politics it enshrined have provided the vocabulary of power that is used in China to the present day, though it is now better known as a film set or the background of displays of opera, rock, and fashion." "Geremie Barme peels away the veneer of power, secrecy, inscrutability, and passions of imperial China, to provide a new and original history of the culture, politics, and architecture of the Forbidden City. Designed to overawe the visitor with the power of imperial China, the Forbidden City remains one of the true wonders of the world."--Jacket. |
Subject | Forbidden City 紫禁城 (Beijing)--History--Anecdotes |
Series | foo 107 |
ISBN | 9780674027794 ; 0674027795 |
LCCN | 2007040893 |
Date | 1996 |
Publish_location | Canberra |
Publisher | Australian National University |
Collection | Ricci Institute Library |
Edition | |
Language | English |
Record_type | Extract/Offprint |
Series | George Ernest Morrison lecture in ethnology ; 57 |
Shelf | File Cabinet A |
Call Number | DS795.6.Y8 B35 1996 |
Description | pp. 111-158 : ill.; 24 cm. |
Note | The garden of perfect brightness : a life in ruins / Geremie Barmé. Cover title. Includes bibliographical references. Features digital reconstruction illustrations of palace landmarks. |
Subject | Palaces--China--Beijing Gardens--China--Beijing Yuanmingyuan 圓明園 (Beijing 北京)--History |
Series | foo 116 |
LCCN | 00-363947 |