ABSTRACT

This book presents the first collection of studies of the senses and sensory experiences in China, filling a gap in sensory research while offering new approaches to Chinese Studies.

Bringing together 12 chapters by literary scholars and historians, this book critically interrogates the deeply rooted meanings that the senses have coded in Chinese culture and society. Built on an exploration of the sensorium in early Chinese thought and late imperial literature, this book reveals the sensory manifestations of societal change and cultural transformation in China from the nineteenth century to the present day. It features in-depth examinations of a variety of concepts, representations, and practices, including aural and visual paradigms in ancient Chinese texts; odours in Ming-Qing literature and Republican Shanghai; the tactility of kissing and the sonic culture of community singing in the Republican era; the socialist sensorium in art, propaganda, memory, and embodied experiences; and contemporary-era multisensory cultural practices.

Engaging with the exciting "sensory turn," this original work makes a unique contribution to the world history of the senses, and will be a valuable resource to scholars and students of Chinese Literature, History, Cultural Studies, and Media.

chapter 1|16 pages

Introduction

Shengqing Wu and Xuelei Huang

part I|52 pages

Understanding the Senses in Traditional Culture

chapter 2|23 pages

Aural and Visual Hierarchies in Texts from Early China

Beyond Epistemology of the Senses

chapter 3|27 pages

The Culture of Smells

Taboo and Sublimation from Huchou to Tianxiang

part II|80 pages

Reconfiguring the Senses and Modern Sensibility

chapter 4|28 pages

Smellscapes of Nanjing Road

Cognitive and Affective Mapping

chapter 5|29 pages

The Kiss as an Art of Love

Touch, Sensuality, and Embodied Experience in Modern Chinese Culture

chapter 6|21 pages

Radio, Sound Cinema, and Community Singing

The Making of a New Sonic Culture in Modern China

part III|80 pages

Socialist Corporeality, Sensorium, and Memory

chapter 7|23 pages

Making Sense of Labor

Works of Art and Arts of Work in China's Great Leap Forward

chapter 8|25 pages

Narrating Sweet Bitterness

Tasting and Sensing the Chinese Cultural Revolution

chapter 9|30 pages

The Hot Noise of Open-Air Cinema

part IV|60 pages

Senses, Media, and Postmodernity

chapter 10|19 pages

Touching Father

Sight, Sound, Touch, and Intermedial Intimacies

chapter 12|13 pages

Epilogue

“And suddenly the memory revealed itself …”—Making Sense of the Senses in History