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[personal profile] x_los posting in [community profile] dankodes
This week, we're reading poems 7-12 in this collection. Because of the nature of the book in question, I'll ask you to refer here for Chinese and English copies of the poems and the images together.

You can 
view the scroll as a whole more easily and read some background on the Met's website; the Wiki page will also help orient you. In case it's useful, here is a plain-text version of the scroll. 

This is the second of three weeks we'll be spending on this collection. I'll link us to some additional background information in the coming weeks, once we've had a chance to orient ourselves; this is the first time the piece we're looking at has come with its own explanatory material, and that's a sound starting-point. 

This Harvard
project on the scroll looks interesting, but I can't access it in Chrome or Safari; it might just be dead.

The Met provides us with some short, online-accessible monographs which offer may context for the pictorial aspect of the scroll: 


Sung and Yuan Paintings

Landscapes Clear and Radiant: The Art of Wang Hui (1632–1717)

Beyond Representation: Chinese Painting and Calligraphy, Eighth–Fourteenth Century

Along the Border of Heaven: Sung and Yüan Paintings from the C. C. Wang Collection

Date: 2021-09-19 10:36 pm (UTC)

Re: 7. Concert on the Steppe

superborb: (Default)
From: [personal profile] superborb
It sounds like she's thinking of all the people + animals as effectively jailers, preventing an escape?

'Living stealthily' is in modern Chinese 'to live without purpose'; the first char means 'to steal' and the second is 'life'.

Wiki is pretty inconclusive about the origins of the pipa. "This may be due to the fact that the word pipa was used in ancient texts to describe a variety of plucked chordophones from the Qin to the Tang dynasty, including the long-necked spiked lute and the short-necked lute, as well as the differing accounts given in these ancient texts. Traditional Chinese narrative prefers the story of the Han Chinese Princess Liu Xijun sent to marry a barbarian Wusun king during the Han dynasty, with the pipa being invented so she could play music on horseback to soothe her longings.[1][2] Modern researchers such as Laurence Picken, Shigeo Kishibe, and John Myers suggested a non-Chinese origin.[3][4][5]"

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