Ruling the stage : : social and cultural history of opera in Sichuan from the Qing to the People's Republic of China / / by Igor Iwo Chabrowski.

Through an innovative interdisciplinary reading and field research, Igor Chabrowski analyses the history of the development of opera in Sichuan, arguing that opera serves as a microcosm of the profound transformation of modern Chinese culture between the 18th century and 1950s. He investigates the c...

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Superior document:China Studies ; 49
VerfasserIn:
Place / Publishing House:Leiden, The Netherlands ;, Boston : : Brill,, [2022]
©2022
Year of Publication:2022
Language:English
Series:China Studies ; 49.
Physical Description:1 online resource (367 pages)
Notes:Igor Chabrowski analyses the history of the development of opera in Sichuan, arguing that opera serves as a microcosm of the profoundtransformation of modern Chinese culture between the 18th century and 1950s.
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spelling Chabrowski, Igor Iwo, author.
Ruling the stage : social and cultural history of opera in Sichuan from the Qing to the People's Republic of China / by Igor Iwo Chabrowski.
Leiden, The Netherlands ; Boston : Brill, [2022]
©2022
1 online resource (367 pages)
text txt rdacontent
computer c rdamedia
online resource cr rdacarrier
China Studies ; 49
Igor Chabrowski analyses the history of the development of opera in Sichuan, arguing that opera serves as a microcosm of the profoundtransformation of modern Chinese culture between the 18th century and 1950s.
Through an innovative interdisciplinary reading and field research, Igor Chabrowski analyses the history of the development of opera in Sichuan, arguing that opera serves as a microcosm of the profound transformation of modern Chinese culture between the 18th century and 1950s. He investigates the complex path of opera over this course of history: exiting the temple festivals, becoming a public obsession on commercial stages, and finally being harnessed to partisan propaganda work. The book analyzes the process of cross-regional integration of Chinese culture and the emergence of the national opera genre. Moreover, opera is shown as an example of the culture wars that raged inside China’s popular culture.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Acknowledgments -- List of Plates, Table and Maps -- Introduction -- PART 1: Opera in Qing-Era Sichuan -- 1 Development of Opera in Qing-Era Sichuan -- 1 The Role of Opera in Qing Society -- 2 Opera and Construction of the Community -- 3 The Nineteenth-Century Flourishing: The Role of Opera in Shaping Local Religious Practice -- 4 Opera and Shaping of the Material and Social Landscape -- 5 A Market Town: A Temple-Centered Society, An Opera-Centered Society -- 6 The Big City Perspective -- 7 Opera between the Elites and the Commoners -- 8 Opera, Officials, and the Social (Dis)Order -- 9 Concluding Remarks -- PART 2: The New Institutionalization: Law, Market, Politics, and Culture of Commercialized Art, 1902–1937 -- 2 A Transformed Relationship: Theater and Power after the Qing New Policies -- 1 The Three Forces of Change: Destruction of Temples, Commercialization, and the New Legal Order -- 2 New Policies and a Novel Way of Doing Business in Sichuan -- 3 The Protecting Power of Official Greed: Republican Commercial Theater -- 4 Taxing -- 5 Helping Hand -- 6 Women on the Show -- 7 Rectifying Opera -- 3 Commercial Opera: Shaping the City and Shaping the Actors -- 1 Theaters and Urban Zoning: Researching the Social Background of the Audiences -- 2 Early Transformation in the Social and Spatial Geography of Opera -- 3 Republican Theaters and Urban Zoning: Crystallization of the Opera’s Public -- 4 Commercial Theater and Actors’ Careers -- 5 Concluding Remarks -- 4 The Culture of the Commercial Opera -- 1 The Methods of Studying Opera: Troupes, Talent, and Repertoires -- 2 Watching the Commercial Show: How Was It Served? -- 3 Favorite Plays and the Cultural Universe of Sichuan Audiences -- 4 Gods, Emperors, Heroes… -- 5 Time and Place -- 6 Concluding Remarks -- Illustration Quire -- PART 3: Creating the New World -- 5 The Divide: Local Intellectuals and the Cultural Conflict -- 1 Commercial Daily ’s Explorations and Experimentations with New Drama -- 2 Dissatisfaction, Estrangement, Elitism, and a Turn to the Left -- 3 Radicalization and Rejection -- 4 Concluding Remarks -- 6 The Times of the Nationalists (1937–1949) and the War -- 1 Performing Arts Culture -- 2 Military Emergency and China’s Migration to the Southwest -- 3 Inventing the Wartime Theater -- 4 Putting Words into Action -- 5 Living through Frustration: Playwrights and the War -- 6 An All Too Visible Context: Sichuan Opera and the War -- 7 Concluding Remarks -- 7 Revolution: Communist “People’s Art” -- 1 Communist Conquest of Sichuan: A New Political Context -- 2 Political and Ideological Basis of the Opera Reform -- 3 Breaking the “Superstitious” Opera -- 4 Adjusting to the New Party-State Policies -- 5 Seizing Control over the Opera Companies -- 6 Opera Becomes Useful to the Communist State -- 7 Policy in Action: Chongqing, 1951–1952 -- 8 Concluding Remarks -- 8 Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Index.
Description based on print version record.
Operas, Chinese China Sichuan Sheng History and criticism.
China Civilization 1644-1912.
Print version: Chabrowski, Igor Iwo Ruling the Stage: Social and Cultural History of Opera in Sichuan from the Qing to the People's Republic of China Boston : BRILL,c2022 9789004519381
China Studies ; 49.
language English
format eBook
author Chabrowski, Igor Iwo,
spellingShingle Chabrowski, Igor Iwo,
Ruling the stage : social and cultural history of opera in Sichuan from the Qing to the People's Republic of China /
China Studies ;
Acknowledgments -- List of Plates, Table and Maps -- Introduction -- PART 1: Opera in Qing-Era Sichuan -- 1 Development of Opera in Qing-Era Sichuan -- 1 The Role of Opera in Qing Society -- 2 Opera and Construction of the Community -- 3 The Nineteenth-Century Flourishing: The Role of Opera in Shaping Local Religious Practice -- 4 Opera and Shaping of the Material and Social Landscape -- 5 A Market Town: A Temple-Centered Society, An Opera-Centered Society -- 6 The Big City Perspective -- 7 Opera between the Elites and the Commoners -- 8 Opera, Officials, and the Social (Dis)Order -- 9 Concluding Remarks -- PART 2: The New Institutionalization: Law, Market, Politics, and Culture of Commercialized Art, 1902–1937 -- 2 A Transformed Relationship: Theater and Power after the Qing New Policies -- 1 The Three Forces of Change: Destruction of Temples, Commercialization, and the New Legal Order -- 2 New Policies and a Novel Way of Doing Business in Sichuan -- 3 The Protecting Power of Official Greed: Republican Commercial Theater -- 4 Taxing -- 5 Helping Hand -- 6 Women on the Show -- 7 Rectifying Opera -- 3 Commercial Opera: Shaping the City and Shaping the Actors -- 1 Theaters and Urban Zoning: Researching the Social Background of the Audiences -- 2 Early Transformation in the Social and Spatial Geography of Opera -- 3 Republican Theaters and Urban Zoning: Crystallization of the Opera’s Public -- 4 Commercial Theater and Actors’ Careers -- 5 Concluding Remarks -- 4 The Culture of the Commercial Opera -- 1 The Methods of Studying Opera: Troupes, Talent, and Repertoires -- 2 Watching the Commercial Show: How Was It Served? -- 3 Favorite Plays and the Cultural Universe of Sichuan Audiences -- 4 Gods, Emperors, Heroes… -- 5 Time and Place -- 6 Concluding Remarks -- Illustration Quire -- PART 3: Creating the New World -- 5 The Divide: Local Intellectuals and the Cultural Conflict -- 1 Commercial Daily ’s Explorations and Experimentations with New Drama -- 2 Dissatisfaction, Estrangement, Elitism, and a Turn to the Left -- 3 Radicalization and Rejection -- 4 Concluding Remarks -- 6 The Times of the Nationalists (1937–1949) and the War -- 1 Performing Arts Culture -- 2 Military Emergency and China’s Migration to the Southwest -- 3 Inventing the Wartime Theater -- 4 Putting Words into Action -- 5 Living through Frustration: Playwrights and the War -- 6 An All Too Visible Context: Sichuan Opera and the War -- 7 Concluding Remarks -- 7 Revolution: Communist “People’s Art” -- 1 Communist Conquest of Sichuan: A New Political Context -- 2 Political and Ideological Basis of the Opera Reform -- 3 Breaking the “Superstitious” Opera -- 4 Adjusting to the New Party-State Policies -- 5 Seizing Control over the Opera Companies -- 6 Opera Becomes Useful to the Communist State -- 7 Policy in Action: Chongqing, 1951–1952 -- 8 Concluding Remarks -- 8 Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Index.
author_facet Chabrowski, Igor Iwo,
author_variant i i c ii iic
author_role VerfasserIn
author_sort Chabrowski, Igor Iwo,
title Ruling the stage : social and cultural history of opera in Sichuan from the Qing to the People's Republic of China /
title_sub social and cultural history of opera in Sichuan from the Qing to the People's Republic of China /
title_full Ruling the stage : social and cultural history of opera in Sichuan from the Qing to the People's Republic of China / by Igor Iwo Chabrowski.
title_fullStr Ruling the stage : social and cultural history of opera in Sichuan from the Qing to the People's Republic of China / by Igor Iwo Chabrowski.
title_full_unstemmed Ruling the stage : social and cultural history of opera in Sichuan from the Qing to the People's Republic of China / by Igor Iwo Chabrowski.
title_auth Ruling the stage : social and cultural history of opera in Sichuan from the Qing to the People's Republic of China /
title_new Ruling the stage :
title_sort ruling the stage : social and cultural history of opera in sichuan from the qing to the people's republic of china /
series China Studies ;
series2 China Studies ;
publisher Brill,
publishDate 2022
physical 1 online resource (367 pages)
contents Acknowledgments -- List of Plates, Table and Maps -- Introduction -- PART 1: Opera in Qing-Era Sichuan -- 1 Development of Opera in Qing-Era Sichuan -- 1 The Role of Opera in Qing Society -- 2 Opera and Construction of the Community -- 3 The Nineteenth-Century Flourishing: The Role of Opera in Shaping Local Religious Practice -- 4 Opera and Shaping of the Material and Social Landscape -- 5 A Market Town: A Temple-Centered Society, An Opera-Centered Society -- 6 The Big City Perspective -- 7 Opera between the Elites and the Commoners -- 8 Opera, Officials, and the Social (Dis)Order -- 9 Concluding Remarks -- PART 2: The New Institutionalization: Law, Market, Politics, and Culture of Commercialized Art, 1902–1937 -- 2 A Transformed Relationship: Theater and Power after the Qing New Policies -- 1 The Three Forces of Change: Destruction of Temples, Commercialization, and the New Legal Order -- 2 New Policies and a Novel Way of Doing Business in Sichuan -- 3 The Protecting Power of Official Greed: Republican Commercial Theater -- 4 Taxing -- 5 Helping Hand -- 6 Women on the Show -- 7 Rectifying Opera -- 3 Commercial Opera: Shaping the City and Shaping the Actors -- 1 Theaters and Urban Zoning: Researching the Social Background of the Audiences -- 2 Early Transformation in the Social and Spatial Geography of Opera -- 3 Republican Theaters and Urban Zoning: Crystallization of the Opera’s Public -- 4 Commercial Theater and Actors’ Careers -- 5 Concluding Remarks -- 4 The Culture of the Commercial Opera -- 1 The Methods of Studying Opera: Troupes, Talent, and Repertoires -- 2 Watching the Commercial Show: How Was It Served? -- 3 Favorite Plays and the Cultural Universe of Sichuan Audiences -- 4 Gods, Emperors, Heroes… -- 5 Time and Place -- 6 Concluding Remarks -- Illustration Quire -- PART 3: Creating the New World -- 5 The Divide: Local Intellectuals and the Cultural Conflict -- 1 Commercial Daily ’s Explorations and Experimentations with New Drama -- 2 Dissatisfaction, Estrangement, Elitism, and a Turn to the Left -- 3 Radicalization and Rejection -- 4 Concluding Remarks -- 6 The Times of the Nationalists (1937–1949) and the War -- 1 Performing Arts Culture -- 2 Military Emergency and China’s Migration to the Southwest -- 3 Inventing the Wartime Theater -- 4 Putting Words into Action -- 5 Living through Frustration: Playwrights and the War -- 6 An All Too Visible Context: Sichuan Opera and the War -- 7 Concluding Remarks -- 7 Revolution: Communist “People’s Art” -- 1 Communist Conquest of Sichuan: A New Political Context -- 2 Political and Ideological Basis of the Opera Reform -- 3 Breaking the “Superstitious” Opera -- 4 Adjusting to the New Party-State Policies -- 5 Seizing Control over the Opera Companies -- 6 Opera Becomes Useful to the Communist State -- 7 Policy in Action: Chongqing, 1951–1952 -- 8 Concluding Remarks -- 8 Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Index.
isbn 9789004519398
9789004519381
callnumber-first D - World History
callnumber-subject DS - Asia
callnumber-label DS754
callnumber-sort DS 3754.14 C433 42022
geographic China Civilization 1644-1912.
geographic_facet China
Sichuan Sheng
era_facet 1644-1912.
illustrated Not Illustrated
dewey-hundreds 900 - History & geography
dewey-tens 950 - History of Asia
dewey-ones 951 - China & adjacent areas
dewey-full 951.03
dewey-sort 3951.03
dewey-raw 951.03
dewey-search 951.03
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