The Greening of Chinese Literature: Shanshui Aesthetics and the Environmental Crisis

The Greening of Chinese Literature: Shanshui Aesthetics and the Environmental Crisis

Date/Time
Date(s) - 04/09/2015
6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

Location
PSU Smith Memorial Student Union, room: 238
1825 SW Broadway --Portland

The Confucius Institute at PSU presents

The Greening of Chinese Literature:
Shanshui Aesthetics and the Environmental Crisis

By Dr. Andrea Riemenschnitter, Professor of Modern Chinese Studies
at the Institute of Asian and Oriental Studies, University of Zurich

FREE & Open to the public

Discription:

The invocation of classical shanshui, or landscape aesthetics in contemporary cultural productions reflects the quest for a paradigm change in human environmental agency. Based on both the resumed study of the historical legacies, entanglements and connectivities linking present landscapes to their pasts and futures, and the role of aesthetic notions such as the sublime, which is not necessarily benign, literature participates significantly in the making of cultural landscapes. From the Book of Odes and Zhuangzi’s animistic fables through Pu Songling’s fickle ghosts, topoi of environmental interdependency abound in traditional Chinese culture. Since the last decades of the 2oth century, this rich literary heritage returned in new contexts revealing a growing desire for alternative cultural paths that allow for a healing relationship of humans with nature and local ecologies. This talk will explore the agency of an “ecological unconscious” in contemporary Chinese poetry.

About the speaker:

Dr. Riemenschnitter work currently focuses on social issues and environmental aesthetics in contemporary sinophone literature, theatre and digital media. Recent book publications include Carnival of the Gods. Mythology, Modernity and the Nation in China’s Twentieth Century (in German, 2011), Diasporic Histories: Cultural Archives of Chinese Transnationalism (ed. with Deborah Madsen, 2009), and The Visible and the Invisible: Poems Leung Ping-kwan (ed. and co-tr., trilingual 2012). She held positions as Head of Department and Director of the URPP Asia and Europe at the University of Zurich, and acted as visiting senior research fellow and guest professor at universities in Beijing, Shanghai, Berkeley, Hong Kong, Singapore and. She is a honorary fellow of Lingnan University, Hong Kong.

Co-sponsored by University of Oregon, Confucius Institute at PSU, and Institute for Asian Studies

For more information contact:

Confucius Institute at PSU | [email protected] |

Institute for Asian Studies | [email protected] | 503-725-8576

Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *