語系:
繁體中文
English
說明(常見問題)
回圖書館首頁
手機版館藏查詢
登入
回首頁
切換:
標籤
|
MARC模式
|
ISBD
Garden, plate, and den: The Chinese...
~
Chang, Elizabeth Hope.
FindBook
Google Book
Amazon
博客來
Garden, plate, and den: The Chinese aesthetic in nineteenth-century British literature and visual culture.
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Garden, plate, and den: The Chinese aesthetic in nineteenth-century British literature and visual culture./
作者:
Chang, Elizabeth Hope.
面頁冊數:
263 p.
附註:
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 65-09, Section: A, page: 3396.
Contained By:
Dissertation Abstracts International65-09A.
標題:
Literature, English. -
電子資源:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3146811
ISBN:
0496057103
Garden, plate, and den: The Chinese aesthetic in nineteenth-century British literature and visual culture.
Chang, Elizabeth Hope.
Garden, plate, and den: The Chinese aesthetic in nineteenth-century British literature and visual culture.
- 263 p.
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 65-09, Section: A, page: 3396.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of California, Berkeley, 2004.
Studies of the nineteenth century's revolutions in visual perception have historically tied these developments to technological innovations---the camera, the stereoscope, the panorama---without acknowledging the profound cultural constructions of vision that shaped these advancements. Garden, Plate and Den works to describe these neglected cultural developments by examining a series of nineteenth-century readings of "China," a term which sometimes meant a geographical locale but always evoked a way of seeing and being seen. Reading poetic image and novelistic description as well as landscape contour and teacup pattern, I locate the roots of a British visual and cultural modernity in the articulation of difference between Chinese and British systems of sight. For many Britons, this difference was simple: the Celestial Empire's walled gardens, forbidden cities, and paintings composed without linear perspective linked directly to a corresponding Chinese stagnancy, despotism, and repressed consciousness ("a people little-eyed and little-minded," as Leigh Hunt puts it). The cultural productions of the British empire, meanwhile, were held to reflect the progressive, dynamic farsightedness befitting a global power. Yet even as the writers and artists I study insisted on defining China as both backward in time and isolated in space, unable to see or move beyond the boundaries of the Great Wall, "the look of China" could be found ever more commonly occupying the territory of British imaginations. Landscape gardens, blue and white porcelain, and opium dens, to cite the dissertation's three major examples, shaped the ways that novelists, poets, essayists and painters not only envisioned the Orient, but wrote and pictured the terms of their own lived experience. As I follow the entanglements and disavowals that accompany the spread of these pieces of China, I contend that the rhetoric of a modern British vision in literature and culture draws from the hallmarks of this condemned Chinese aesthetic. In so doing, I link the Romantic textual productions of John Barrow, William Wordsworth, Leigh Hunt and Charles Lamb with the Victorian fictions of Robert Fortune, George Meredith and Charles Dickens.
ISBN: 0496057103Subjects--Topical Terms:
1017709
Literature, English.
Garden, plate, and den: The Chinese aesthetic in nineteenth-century British literature and visual culture.
LDR
:03126nmm 2200265 4500
001
1837716
005
20050506073153.5
008
130614s2004 eng d
020
$a
0496057103
035
$a
(UnM)AAI3146811
035
$a
AAI3146811
040
$a
UnM
$c
UnM
100
1
$a
Chang, Elizabeth Hope.
$3
1047962
245
1 0
$a
Garden, plate, and den: The Chinese aesthetic in nineteenth-century British literature and visual culture.
300
$a
263 p.
500
$a
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 65-09, Section: A, page: 3396.
500
$a
Chair: Celeste Langan.
502
$a
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of California, Berkeley, 2004.
520
$a
Studies of the nineteenth century's revolutions in visual perception have historically tied these developments to technological innovations---the camera, the stereoscope, the panorama---without acknowledging the profound cultural constructions of vision that shaped these advancements. Garden, Plate and Den works to describe these neglected cultural developments by examining a series of nineteenth-century readings of "China," a term which sometimes meant a geographical locale but always evoked a way of seeing and being seen. Reading poetic image and novelistic description as well as landscape contour and teacup pattern, I locate the roots of a British visual and cultural modernity in the articulation of difference between Chinese and British systems of sight. For many Britons, this difference was simple: the Celestial Empire's walled gardens, forbidden cities, and paintings composed without linear perspective linked directly to a corresponding Chinese stagnancy, despotism, and repressed consciousness ("a people little-eyed and little-minded," as Leigh Hunt puts it). The cultural productions of the British empire, meanwhile, were held to reflect the progressive, dynamic farsightedness befitting a global power. Yet even as the writers and artists I study insisted on defining China as both backward in time and isolated in space, unable to see or move beyond the boundaries of the Great Wall, "the look of China" could be found ever more commonly occupying the territory of British imaginations. Landscape gardens, blue and white porcelain, and opium dens, to cite the dissertation's three major examples, shaped the ways that novelists, poets, essayists and painters not only envisioned the Orient, but wrote and pictured the terms of their own lived experience. As I follow the entanglements and disavowals that accompany the spread of these pieces of China, I contend that the rhetoric of a modern British vision in literature and culture draws from the hallmarks of this condemned Chinese aesthetic. In so doing, I link the Romantic textual productions of John Barrow, William Wordsworth, Leigh Hunt and Charles Lamb with the Victorian fictions of Robert Fortune, George Meredith and Charles Dickens.
590
$a
School code: 0028.
650
4
$a
Literature, English.
$3
1017709
690
$a
0593
710
2 0
$a
University of California, Berkeley.
$3
687832
773
0
$t
Dissertation Abstracts International
$g
65-09A.
790
1 0
$a
Langan, Celeste,
$e
advisor
790
$a
0028
791
$a
Ph.D.
792
$a
2004
856
4 0
$u
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3146811
筆 0 讀者評論
館藏地:
全部
電子資源
出版年:
卷號:
館藏
1 筆 • 頁數 1 •
1
條碼號
典藏地名稱
館藏流通類別
資料類型
索書號
使用類型
借閱狀態
預約狀態
備註欄
附件
W9187230
電子資源
11.線上閱覽_V
電子書
EB
一般使用(Normal)
在架
0
1 筆 • 頁數 1 •
1
多媒體
評論
新增評論
分享你的心得
Export
取書館
處理中
...
變更密碼
登入