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288 pp. February 2002

ISBN 978-0-8248-2359-7P
Out of Print
Keywords: Asia
China
art
history
literature
Children in Chinese Art

ed. by Ann Barrott Wicks

"A beautiful book ... an enchanting entrée into centuries of Chinese social life" --Asian Studies Review, March 2003

"A welcome contribution ... Most of the essays bring forth the deeper and multivalent meanings of the visual images ... by combining iconographic and textual analyses within a larger cultural framework." --Journal of Asian Studies, May 2003

"This volume has fulfilled its aims of establishing the subject of children as a valid object of study for the history of Chinese art and has done a tremendous amount toward explicating the iconography of the child." --China Review International 9 (2002)

"One would never guess, before looking into the seven essays that make up this book, how many areas of Chinese culture and society can be illuminated by the pursuit of a single image, that of the child. Nor would one realize, before seeing the pictures, how delightful many of the images of children prove to be. The authors of the essays, however, explore deeper matters than childhood charm: the new humane values of the Song period, as expressed by parents writing poems about children or painters portraying them no less lovingly; the aspirations of families to see their sons become scholar-officials, and the central role of mothers in their early training; how Confucian morality or Buddhist piety can be manifested in the iconography of the child. These and numerous other concerns are brought to bear, with excellent analyses, on objects of art in a diversity of media, works that somehow sustain their aesthetic appeal even while bearing such burdens of meaning. Lovers of Chinese art and enthusiasts for Chinese culture will find rich rewards in this book." --James Cahill, author of The Lyric Journey: Poetic Painting in China and Japan

"The essays in this volume offer important insights into a familiar but poorly understood icon in Chinese art: the child. The child frequently appears as an image in Chinese decorative arts, didactic illustrations, religious iconography, elite portraiture, and popular woodblock prints. But until now, little has been written to elucidate the great variety and complexity of these images. The authors of this collection unlock the diverse meanings attached to artistic representations of the child in the context of China’s religious, social, and cultural history. Drawing together essays of seven distinguished scholars, Ann Barrott Wicks has done an excellent job of demonstrating the richness of this topic and its importance to our understanding of Chinese art and culture." --Anne Behnke Kinney, University of Virginia

Depictions of children have had a prominent place in Chinese art since the Song period (960-1279). Yet one would be hard pressed to find any significant discussion of children in art in the historical documents of imperial China or contemporary scholarship on Chinese art. Children in Chinese Art brings to the forefront themes and motifs that have crossed social boundaries for centuries but have been overlooked in scholarly treatises. In this volume, experts in the fields of art, religion, literature, and history introduce and elucidate many of the issues surrounding child imagery in China, including its use for didactic reinforcement of social values as well as the amuletic function of these works.

The introduction provides a thought-provoking overview of the history of depictions of children, exploring both stylistic development and the emergence of specific themes. In an insightful essay, China specialists combine expertise in literature and painting to propose that the focus on children in both genres during the Song is an indication of a truly humane society. Skillful use of visual and textual sources from the Ming (1368-1644) and Qing (1644-1911) period explains children's games and the meaning of depictions of boys at play. Gender issues are examined in an intriguing look at mothers and children in woodblock illustrations to Ming versions of the classical text Lie ni juan. Depictions of the childhood of saints and sages from murals and commemorative tablets in ancient temples are considered. The volume concludes with two highly original essays on child protectors and destroyers in Chinese folk religion and family portraits and their scarcity in China before the nineteenth century.

Contributors: Ellen B. Avril, Catherine Barnhart, Richard Barnhart, Terese Tse Bartholomew, Julia K. Murray, Ann Waltner, Ann Barrott Wicks.

Ann Barrott Wicks is professor of Asian art history at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio.

Read the table of contents and/or the introduction (PDF).




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