 476 pp. June 2005
paper, ISBN 978-0-8248-2953-7, $32.00
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Keywords: |
Asia China art anthropology history geography |
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House Home Family: Living and Being Chinese
ed. by Ronald G. Knapp; Kai-Yin Lo
Spatial Habitus Published in association with China Institute
Winner of the 2007 Henry Glassie Award, Vernacular Architecture Forum
“An excellent compendium of architectural, cultural, and historical renditions on the concept of jia (the venerable Chinese tradition of home and family); richly illustrated with color photography and line drawings from historical texts. This book’s timely, topical selections that shed light on jia are long overdue, making it a valuable contribution to a better appreciation of the underpinnings of Chinese society in today’s interactive global economy and cultural exchange.” —China Review International (13:2, fall 2006)
“Majestic. . . . [This book], beautifully designed and magnificently illustrated with color and black-and-white photographs, maps, prints, diagrams, drawings, and more, is a work of art in itself.” —Education about Asia (12:2, fall 2007) “Beautifully illustrated ... an unprecedentedly rich empirical description and theoretical reflection on the changing cultural meaning of the domestic environment.” —Pacific Affairs (spring 2006)
Drawing on the work of leading scholars in the fields of anthropology, architecture, art, art history, geography, and history, House Home Family explores and analyzes the functional, social, and symbolic attributes of Chinese dwellings. It goes beyond generalization to clarify the diverse nature of house, home, and family in China, exploring such topics as the Chinese garden as an integral part of living, house-building ritual and fengshui, architectural aesthetics, the inter-relatedness of furniture and architecture, preservation of historical structures, the structure and development of the family (jia), gender and household space, the role of lineage in the construction of ritual and social space, the function and meaning of the architectural division of space, and domestic space and privacy. The Chinese house, the elementary space in which a family lives and works, resonates the tensions between continuity and innovation that characterize China today. As a dynamic instrument of socialization and a domain of propriety, its “inner” and “outer” spaces as well as ornamentation and ritual helped shape the identity of the Chinese and simultaneously serve as a reflection of this identity. This inaugural volume in the series Spatial Habitus: Making and Meaning in Asia’s Vernacular Architecture contains more than five hundred illustrations, most in color and including a number of rare drawings that demonstrate the richness of domestic architecture and living patterns in traditional and contemporary China. Through its exploration of how Chinese families are organized and why Chinese construct their living spaces the way they do, this carefully researched, convincingly argues, and refreshingly insightful book yields a deeper and wider understanding of what it means to live and be Chinese. color & b/w illus. Contributors: Nancy Berliner, Maggie Bickford, Francesca Bray, Myron L. Cohen, David Faure, James Flath, Wen Fong, Puaypeng Ho, Nancy Jervis, Ronald G. Knapp, Cary Liu, Kai-Yin Lo, Nancy Shatzman Steinhardt, Joseph Wang, Yan Yunxiang.
Ronald G. Knapp is SUNY Distinguished Professor Emeritus in the Department of Geography, State University of New York at New Paltz. Kai-Yin Lo is a designer and an independent scholar living in Hong Kong.
This volume inaugurates a new series: Spatial Habitus: Making and Meaning in Asia’s Vernacular Architecture View sample pages Download chapter 1 (100K)
table of contents
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