Premodern Chinese literature as an archive of vernacular knowledge and everyday life culture

Online International Workshop, 2–4 June 2022

Hosted by the Institute of East and South Asian Cultural Studies, Julius Maximilian University of Würzburg (Germany), the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes (EPHE-PSL) and Research Center on East Asian Civilizations (CRCAO), Paris (France) and the Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures, University of Verona (Italy)

Traditional Chinese vernacular literature, in particular fictionalized narrative (xiaoshuo 小說) and singing drama (xiqu 戲曲), including prosimetric forms (shuochang 說唱), has often been construed in the communicative contexts of entertainment and diversion, which were also considered the primary reasons for their popularity with audiences and readerships. Despite the modern reappreciation of vernacular literature and the inclusion of its masterpieces in the literary canon, there still are dimensions and potentials of this large body of literature that have been neglected and remained scarcely explored.

As a productive new approach, fiction and drama are being rediscovered as archives of knowledge. The acquisition of expanded world knowledge, including emotional knowledge, the techniques of social intercourse, or the insights into the hidden life worlds of other social spheres, such as elite domestic life, the bandit adventures, or the goings-on at the imperial court, have indeed been among the strongest attractions to readers of vernacular literature. Moreover, as commentaries and critical annotations indicate, vernacular literature has also been considered valuable for the transmission of ethical values and the lessons of history.

The mimetic aesthetics of vernacular literature, with its acute attention to the features and details of everyday life, has not only facilitated the shaping of rich tableaus and absorbing plots, but has, as an unintended side effect, also accumulated a unique archive of vernacular knowledge. Novels such as Jin Ping Mei 金瓶梅 (The Plum in the Golden Vase) or Honglou meng 紅樓夢 (The Dream of the Red Chamber) have been characterized as “encyclopedic” in their coverage of aspects of everyday culture and in this regard have been compared to traditional encyclopedias for everyday life (riyong leishu 日用類書, wanbao quanshu 萬寶全書). The reconstruction of everyday worlds in the late imperial past can partly rely on the extensive knowledge included in this archive. The literary representations of aspects of everyday life in vernacular literature nevertheless must not be mistaken for any neutral rendering or ‘data’, but, due to their inherent tendentiousness and construed nature, are always in need of contextual interpretation and cross-textual comparison. Therefore, this approach requires the development of an analytical methodology of its own. [...]

Deadline : 15 January 2022.

? Plus d’informations

Appels à communications
Date limite