發表於2025-04-30
The Social Life of Inkstones pdf epub mobi txt 電子書 下載
Dorothy Ko (Chinese 高彥頤) is a Professor of History and Women's Studies at the Barnard College of Columbia University. She is a historian of early modern China, known for her multi-disciplinary and multi-dimensional research. As a historian of early modern China, she has endeavored to engage with the field of modern China studies; as a China scholar, she has always positioned herself within the study of women and gender and applied feminist approaches in her work; as a historian, she has ventured across disciplinary boundaries, into fields that include literature, visual and material culture, science and technology, as well as studies of fashion, the body and sexuality.
An inkstone, a piece of polished stone no bigger than an outstretched hand, is an instrument for grinding ink, a collectible object of art, a token of exchange between friends or sovereign states, and an inscriptional surface on which texts and images are carved and reproduced. As such the inkstone is entangled with the production of elite masculinity and the culture of wen (culture, literature, civility) in China, Korea, and Japan for over a millennium. Curiously, this ubiquitous object in East Asia is virtually unknown in Europe and America.
The Social Life of Inkstones introduces its hidden history and cultural significance to scholars and collectors and in so doing, writes the stonecutters and artisans into history. Each of the five chapters is set in a specific place in disparate parts of the empire: the imperial workshops in the Forbidden City, the Duan quarries in Guangdong, inkstonecarving workshops in Suzhou and elsewhere in the south, and collectors’ homes in Fujian. Taken together, they trace the trajectories of the inkstone between court and society, and through the course of its entire social life. In bringing to life the people involved in making, using, collecting, and writing about the inkstone, this study shows the powerful emotional and technical investments that such a small object engendered.
This first book-length study of inkstones focuses on a group of inkstone carvers and collectors, highlighting the work of Gu Erniang, a woman transitioned the artistry of inkstone-making to modernity between the 1680s and 1730s. The sophistication of these artisans and the craft practice of the scholars associated with them announced a new social order in which the age-old hierarchy of head over hand no longer predominated.
##等瞭五年瞭,終於得以閱讀,可以看到作者一開始是打算由顧二娘硯入手進行研究書寫的,但受限於資料的匱乏未能如願。但她仍通過多個視角展開,描寫瞭瞭對清代製硯者與文人之間的互動關係。 第一章從清宮廷製硯齣發,通過描寫清統治者對於不同於傳統漢人製硯材質和樣式的追求,將...
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評分##??♀️ 高彥頤(Dorothy Ko),美國哥倫比亞大學巴納德學院曆史係教授,研究方嚮為古代晚期和近代的中國科技與性彆/婦女史、物質文化,著有《纏足:“金蓮崇拜”盛極而衰的演變》《閨塾師:明末清初江南的纔女文化》等。近日由商務印書館引進齣版的高彥頤新著《硯史:清初社會的工匠與...
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評分The Social Life of Inkstones pdf epub mobi txt 電子書 下載