of museums and spaces for interpretation…

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Shot in the “museum” or interpretive center at the temple complex on top of Miaofengshan (outside Beijing by about 40km), this picture from our fieldwork illustrates the flexibility of spaces used to make sense of culture and heritage. Filled with historic photos that help carry the narrative of the temples in conjunction with Mr. Wang’s stories and explanations, it also houses a ping pong table. While this may seem incongruous from some perspectives, it’s perfectly reasonable from others. And that’s the trick of interpretation: the space in play is more than an institution (i.e museum), but also more than a concept (i.e. truth or authenticity). This space is flexible and multimodal, allowing for visitors, culture workers, and other participants to engage in meaning-making.

On the topic of interpretation, here are links to two different articles. The first is about a museum in Fangshang County (west of Beijing) dedicated to the important revolutionary song, “Without the Communist Party, There Would Be No New China.” This piece was written in 2009, but recently revisited in another recent post here.

The second article tracks the history of the pipa in terms of its iconic role of “national instrument.” Adapted from a conference paper, it’s somewhat long but worth reading.

With both of these pieces, we should consider the question/issues of interpretation. What meanings emerge in each article? What are the perspectives of each author? What are the goals of interpretation? Many more questions likely linger, so have a look at these and consider the spaces for interpretation generated by ChinaVine and our field school.

a few snaps from Wednesday's Beijing tour…

I’ve pulled these from a Flickr stream I started. They represent scenes from our first full day in Beijing, during which we visited Tian’an men Square and the Forbidden City in the hot mugginess of a July afternoon. Plenty of other people were out along with us…

our coach

our ride around town, with Oscar the Guide

long view of Tian'an men Square (south to north)

looking down Tian’an men Square, from the south to the north

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the Square is dressed up for the 90th Anniversary of the CCP (which happened on July 1, 2011)

portable photo studio
in Tian'an men Square

two shots from our portable photo studio session; top is the studio in action and bottom is a recreation of the photo he printed for us!

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crowd entering the Forbidden City (south gate)

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somewhere near the middle of the Forbidden City

beware

leaving the Forbidden City (north gate)

Test Post – Chinese Wedding Photo Boom

Just thought I’d contribute a post as a way to test out the blog stream.

Last night I saw a news report on CBS news focusing on the rapid growth of the wedding photo industry. Couples are going all out, spending up to $10,000 on elaborate wedding photography that allows them to “re-enact romantic fantasies”.

One of the things that I found most interesting was the couples that chose to have wedding photos with themes connecting to Imperial China. I’ve skimmed through Jefferey N. Wasserstrom’s China In The 21st Century: What Everyone Needs To Know, and couldn’t help but think of the section dedicated to the resurgence in a historic national pride in the wake of the cultural revolution, which attempted to stamp out all memory of Imperial China. Evidently one of the  more popular themes in these wedding photos are “Imperialist China” shoots.

At the same time I believe this extravagance in terms of things such as weddings in a country  “where the net urban income averages less than $250 a month” really shows that the people of China are acutely conscious of their country’s status as a nation with one foot in and one foot out of an overall global acceptance and extremely eager to enter a larger cultural dialogue.

Check out the article here

And The Video……

Chinese Couples Go All Out For Weddings