Author: Hsiao Li-ling, 1964-

The eternal present of the past : illustration, theatre, and reading in the Wanli period, 1573-1619
Date2007
Publish_locationLeiden
PublisherBrill
CollectionRicci Institute Library
Edition
LanguageEnglish
Record_typeDigital Book (PDF)
SeriesChina studies (Leiden, Netherlands) : 12
ShelfDigital Archives
Call NumberPL2386.X53 2007
Descriptionpdf. [xix, 347 p. : illustrations]
Note

The eternal present of the past : illustration, theatre, and reading in the Wanli period, 1573-1619 / Li-ling Hsiao.

Includes bibliographical references (pages 313-334) and index.

Acknowledgments; List of Illustrations; Introduction: Theater, Illustration, and Time; Chapter One: Toward the Contextualization of Woodblock Illustration: A Critique of Art Historical Method; Chapter Two: The Stage or the Page: Competing Conceptions of the Play in the Wanli Period; Chapter Three: Performance Illustration; Chapter Four: Performance as an Interaction with the Past; Chapter Five: Image as an Interaction with the Past; Chapter Six: Reading as an Interaction with the Past; Conclusion: The Role of the Publisher; Appendix; Glossary; Bibliography; Index.

Drawing together illustration, theater, and literature, this study examines a late Ming conception of the stage as a mystical space for temporal conflation that allowed the past to be reborn in the present and to uphold the continuity of the cultural tradition.--OCLC record

This study draws together various elements in late Ming culture – illustration, theater, literature – and examines their interrelation in the context of the publication of drama. It examines a late Ming conception of the stage as a mystical space in which the past was literally reborn within the present. This temporal conflation allowed the past to serve as a vigorous and immediate moral example and was considered a hugely important mechanism by which the continuity of the Confucian tradition could be upheld.
By using theatrical conventions of stage arrangement, acting gesture, and frontal address, drama illustration recreated the mystical character of the stage within the pages of the book, and thus set the conflation of past and present on a broader footing.--Brill webpage.

Local access dig.pdf. [Hsiao-Eternal present of the past.pdf]

SubjectChinese drama--Ming dynasty, 1368-1644--History and criticism Illustrated books--China--Ming-Qing dynasties, 1368-1911 Wood-engraving, Chinese--Ming-Qing dynasties, 1368-1911 Books and reading--China--History--17th century Books and reading--China--History--16th century Illustration of books--China--History Block printing--China--16th-17th centuries Theater--China--Ming dynasty, 1368-1644
Seriesfoo 108
ISBN9789047419952 ; 9047419952
LCCN2007298876