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Chinese 110: Introduction to the Cultural Traditions of China
Fall 2004

Instructor: Jack W. Chen
Email
: jchen2@wellesley.edu

This is an admittedly noncomprehensive introduction to Chinese cultural traditions—no single-semester course can possibly do justice to a culture that spans approximately 6000 years. Even so, my hope is that this course will provide a basic understanding of the period from 2000 BC to AD 1950, the four millennia in which the idea of Chinese tradition and culture was invented, developed, and revised. This is an ambitious hope (and that translates into a significant amount of reading), but I believe that the rewards will be worth it.

The textbook upon which all other aspects of the course is built is: Patricia Ebrey, The Cambridge Illustrated History of China (Cambridge: Cambridge University, 1996). It is important that you read the corresponding chapter in Ebrey before the start of each new dynasty or period. This will help contextualize and enrich the readings assigned for the class meetings. As you will find in the syllabus, these consist of early political writings and philosophy, historical accounts, Daoist texts and commentaries, Buddhist scriptures, and literary works by major poets, fiction writers and dramatists. We will also read less familiar works such as legal codes, debates on government policy, and family morality manuals. And last, but not least, attention will be paid to art and material culture, including neolithic pottery, Han grave goods, Buddhist cave murals, and Song landscape paintings. All of these readings will be available on e-reserves.

An important component of the course is the course website. This has been designed by Mimi Lai and Kristen Roth; it provides not only an image database for slides discussed in lecture, but also an interactive timeline. Students will be asked every week to pair up and post short descriptions of important historical figures, events, developments, policies, literary works, etc., to the timeline. This will serve as your study guide for the final exams, and hopefully, may one day become an entirely student-authored online reference work for Chinese Studies at Wellesley.

Grades will be determined as follows:

Attendance and class participation 10%
Weekly entries for timeline 30%
Three short papers (about 5 pp.) 35%
Final examination 25%

Reference and Research Tools for the course

Syllabus
Download Syllabus as Word document

Tues., Sept. 7 The idea of China, Chinese cosmology, and the Chinese language

From Neolithic China to the Shang and Zhou dynasties
Fri., Sept. 10

Beginnings of Chinese history
Reading: Ebrey, Chapter 1: “The Origins of Chinese Civilization”

Images: Neolithic, Shang, Zhou

Tues., Sept. 14

Confucius and his disciples
Readings: Selections from the Analects (Lunyu), in Wm. Theodore de Bary and Irene Bloom, eds., Sources of Chinese Tradition, vol. 1, 2nd ed. (New York: Columbia University, 1999), 45-63.

Fri., Sept. 17

Early poetry: The Classic of Poetry and The Lyrics of Chu
Readings:
Selections from Classic of Poetry: Poems 235, 236, 237, 245, 255, 272, 290, in Arthur Waley, trans., The Book of Songs: The Ancient Chinese Classic of Poetry, rev. ed., ed. Joseph R. Allen (New York: Grove Press, 1996), 225-233, 243-247, 261-262, 292-293.

Selections from Lyrics of Chu: “The Nine Songs,” trans. David Hawkes, in John Minford and Joseph S. M. Lau, eds., Classical Chinese Literature: An Anthology of Translations, vol. 1, From Antiquity to the Tang Dynasty (New York and Hong Kong: Columbia University and the Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2000), 237-239, 253-263.


The Warring States Period
  Please read: Ebrey, Chapter 2: “Philosophical Foundations”
Tues., Sept. 21

Mencius and Xunzi: interpreting the early Confucian tradition
Readings:
Selections from Mencius, in D. C. Lau, trans., Mencius (New York: Penguin, 1970), 49, 54-59, 160-167, 172, 179-180, 182-184, 204.

Xunzi, “A Discussion of Rites” in Burton Watson, trans., Xunzi: Basic Writings (New York: Columbia University, 2003), 93-114.

Fri., Sept. 24

Philosophical Daoism and Legalism
Readings:
Selections from Laozi, from D. C. Lau, trans., Tao Te Ching: A Bilingual Edition (Hong Kong: Chinese University of HK, 2001), 2-27, 114-117.

Zhuangzi, “Free and Easy Wandering,” in Stephen Owen, ed. and trans., An Anthology of Chinese Literature: Beginnings to 1911 (New York: W. W. Norton, 1996), 113-123.

Legalist thinkers, selections in de Bary and Bloom, eds., Sources of Chinese Tradition, vol. 1, 192-212.


The Qin and Han Dynasties
  Please read: Ebrey, Chapter 3: “The Creation of the Bureaucratic Empire”
Tues., Sept. 28

The death of the First Emperor of China
Reading: “The Basic Annals of the First Emperor of the Qin,” in Burton Watson, trans., Records of the Grand Historian: Qin Dynasty (Hong Kong and New York: Chinese University of Hong Kong and Columbia University, 1993), 35-64, 80-81.

Images: Qin Shihuangdi’s tomb complex

Fri., Oct. 1

Images of the afterlife in early China (Mawangdui)
Reading: Michael Loewe, Ways to Paradise: The Chinese Quest for Immortality (Taibei: SMC, 1994), 17-59.

Images: Mawangdui funerary images

Tues., Oct. 5

Sima Qian, the first historian of China
Readings: “The Biographies of the Assassin-Retainers,” in Burton Watson, trans., Records of the Historian: Chapters from the Shih chi of Ssu-ma Ch’ien (New York: Columbia University, 1969), 45-67.

“Sima Qian’s Letter to Ren An,” in Watson, trans., Records of the Grand Historian, 227-237.


Wei, Jin, and The Period of Disunion
  Please read: Ebrey, Chapter 4: “Buddhism, Aristocracy, and Alien Rulers”
Fri., Oct. 8

Neo-Daoism and the poetry of Tao Qian
Readings: Selections by Wang Bi (Pi), He Yan (Ho Yen), and Guo Xiang (Kuo Hsiang), in Wing-tsit Chan, trans. and ed., A Source Book in Chinese Philosophy (Princeton: Princeton University, 1963), 314-335.

Tao Qian, selections in Stephen Owen, ed. and trans., An Anthology of Chinese Literature, 309-310, 314-319.

Tues., Oct. 12

Early Chinese Buddhist polemics, doctrine, and art
Readings:
Huiyuan, from “A Monk Does Not Bow Down before a King,” in de Bary and Bloom, eds., Sources of Chinese Tradition, vol. 1, 426-429.

Selections from Burton Watson, trans., The Lotus Sutra (New York: Columbia University, 1993), 3-17 (skip long verse in middle), 55-62, 80-87, 135-137, 150-151, 319-324.

Images: Dunhuang cave murals


The Tang Dynasty
  Please read: Ebrey, Chapter 5: “A Cosmopolitan Empire”
Fri., Oct. 15

Two High Tang poets: Li Bai and Du Fu
Readings: Li Bai (Li Po), selections in Burton Watson, trans. and ed., The Columbia Book of Chinese Poetry: From Early Times to the Thirteenth Century (New York: Columbia University, 1984), 205-217.

Du Fu, selections in Owen, trans. and ed., An Anthology of Chinese Literature, 413-440.

Tues., Oct. 19

Family morality, legal codes, and taxes in the Tang
Readings: Selections from House Instructions of Mr. Yan, The Great Tang Code, and three essays on taxes, in Sources of Chinese Tradition, vol. 1, 539-564.

Fri., Oct. 22

The Tang “ancient-style prose” movement
Readings: Han Yu, “Address to the Crocodiles of Chaozhou” and “Goodbye to Penury,” in David Pollard, trans. and ed., The Chinese Essay (New York: Columbia University, 2000), 31-37.

Han Yu, “Memorial on the Bone of the Buddha”; and Emperor Wuzong, “Edict on the Suppression of Buddhism,” in de Bary and Bloom, eds., Sources in Chinese Tradition, vol. 1, 583-586.

Liu Zongyuan, “The Whip Vendor,” “My First Excursion to West Mountain,” and “The Small Rock Pool West of the Hillock,” in Pollard, trans. and ed., The Chinese Essay, 38-43.


The Song Dynasty
  Please read: Ebrey, Chapter 6: “Shifting South”
Tues., Oct. 26

Two Song intellectuals: Su Shi and Wang Anshi
Readings: Su Shi, “The Poetic Exposition on Red Cliff,” in Owen, ed. and trans., Anthology of Chinese Literature, 292-294.

Wang Anshi and the New Laws Debate, in de Bary and Bloom, eds., Sources of Chinese Tradition, vol. 1, 612-628.

Fri., Oct. 29 Zhu Xi and Neo-Confucianism
Readings: The Cheng Brothers and Zhu Xi, selections in de Bary and Bloom, eds., Sources of Chinese Tradition, vol. 1, 689-714.
Tues., Nov. 2

Monumental landscape painting
Reading: Wen C. Fong, Beyond Representation: Chinese Painting and Calligraphy, 8th-14th Century (New York and New Haven: Metropolitan Museum of Art and Yale University, 1992), 71-117

Images: Song landscape paintings

Fri., Nov. 5

Yuan drama: a Judge Bao play
Reading: “The Wife Snatcher,” in Selected Plays of Guan Hanqing, trans. Yang Xianyi and Gladys Yang, 2nd ed. (Beijing: Foreign Languages, 1979), 38-66.


The Liao, Jin, and Yuan Dynasties
  Please read: Ebrey, Chapter 7: “Alien Rule”
Tues., Nov. 9 Tanner Conference—NO CLASS!
Fri., Nov. 12

Two Yuan painters: Zhao Mengfu and Ni Zan
Readings: Maxwell K. Hearn, “Reunification and Revival” and “The Artist as Hero,” in Wen C. Fong et al, Possessing the Past: Treasures from the National Palace Museum, Taipei (New York and Taipei: Metropolitan Museum of Art and National Palace Museum, 1996), 272-282, 311-319.

Images: Selected paintings by Zhao Mengfu and Ni Zan


The Ming Dynasty
  Please read: Ebrey, Chapter 8: “The Limits of Autocracy”
Tues., Nov. 16 The rise of vernacular fiction
Readings: “The Dragon-and-Tiger Reunion of Shi Hongzhao the Minister and His Friend the King” and “The Chicken-and-Millet Dinner for Fan Juqing, Friend in Life and Death,” in Feng Menglong, ed., Stories Old and New: A Ming Dynasty Collection, trans. Shuhui Yang and Yunqin Yang (Seattle: University of Washington, 2000), 252-289.
Fri., Nov. 19

Wang Yangming, Neo-Confucianism, and informal prose
Readings: Wang Yangming, selections in de Bary and Bloom, eds., Sources of Chinese Tradition, vol. 1, 842-857.

Li Zhi, Yuan Hong-dao, and Zhang Dai, selections in Owen, ed. and trans., An Anthology of Chinese Literature, 807-814, 815-820.

Tues., Nov. 23

Ming commerce and material culture
Reading: Timothy Brook, The Confusions of Pleasure: Commerce and Culture in Ming China (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California, 1998), 153-171, 190-233.

Images: Ming furniture.


The Qing Dynasty
  Please read: Ebrey, Chapter 9: “Manchus and Imperialism”
Tues., Nov. 30

Homosexuality and pretty young men in Qing fiction
Readings: Li Yu, “House of Gathered Refinements,” in Patrick Hanan, trans., A Tower for the Summer Heat (New York: Ballantine, 1992), 83-115.

Chapters 28-29, in Cao Xueqin, The Story of the Stone, vol. 2, trans. David Hawkes (New York: Penguin, 1977), 41-92.

Images: The scholar’s studio.

Fri., Dec. 3 China, Christianity, and the West
Readings: Selections in Wm. Theodore de Bary and Richard Lufrano, eds., Sources of Chinese Tradition, vol. 2, 2nd. ed. (New York: Columbia University, 2000), 142-154, 198-212.

Republican and Communist China
  Please read: Ebrey, Chapter 9: “Manchus and Imperialism”
Tues., Dec. 7

The New Culture Movement
Readings: Ebrey, Chapter 10: “Taking Action”

Chen Duxiu, Hu Shi, and other selections from the New Culture Movement, in de Bary and Lufrano, eds., Sources of Chinese Tradition, vol. 2, 351-395.

Fri., Dec. 10

Mao Zedong and Chinese Communism
Readings: Ebrey, Chapter 11: “Radical Reunification”

Mao Zedong, Liu Shaoqi, Ding Ling, and other selections, in de Bary and Lufrano, eds., Sources of Chinese Tradition, vol. 2, 426-449.


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Created By: Mimi Lai '06, Kristen Roth '06
Maintained By: Jack Chen
Date Created: August 3, 2004
Last Modified: September 16, 2004
Expires: August 6, 2005