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Confucius’ Courtyard : Architecture, Philosophy and the Good Life in China / Xing Ruan



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Autore: Ruan, Xing <1965-> Visualizza persona
Titolo: Confucius’ Courtyard : Architecture, Philosophy and the Good Life in China / Xing Ruan Visualizza cluster
Pubblicazione: London, : Bloomsbury, 2021
Descrizione fisica: 320 p. : ill. ; 22 cm
Soggetto topico: Asian History, Cultural History, Architecture, World Architecture, Chinese Philosophy, Architectural History
Soggetto non controllato: 1000
1949
500
ARCH
Along
Architecture
Armed
Art
BCE
China
China’s
Chinese
Concepts
Confucian
Confucius’
Culture
Defects
English
Equilibrium
Erudite
For
Form
God
History
Level
Longevity
Meaning
Middle
Mind
Part
Philosophy
Pitching
Shapes
Singular
Society
State
Story
Such
They
Time
West
about
accessible
accomplishments
achievable
actively
almost
also
an
ancient
and
anything
approximately
architectural
are
around
artistic
as
assorted
at
avoiding
away
awe
awesome
be
bedrock
been
beginning
below
bespoke
between
beyond
blessing
book
bother
brothel
building
but
by
can
celestial
centuries
century
certain
change
check
chronology
city
civilization
compound
compromize
configured
confines
correspond
cosmic
courtyard
cultural
dear
desired
develop
did
do
doctrine
early
earth
earthly
element
elites
embarks
emerged
enclosure
enduring
enjoying
entirely
equally
especially
established
even
explore
explores
extent
extraordinary
extremes
facets
family
following
freely
from
fully
gentry
good
grounded
guiding
half
has
have
heart
heavens
held
hence
holds
home
house
housed
how
humanly
humans
humble
imperial
indeed
indulge
inextricably
innate
inner
institutional
institutions
interest
intertwined
introduction
is
it
it’s
kept
key
large
largely
letting
lies
life
life’s
live
living
maintaining
manage
managed
market
materialistic
millennia
moment
moral
most
much
nation
need
next
nineteenth
no
nonchalantly
not
of
on
one’s
only
open
or
origin
over
overlooked
palace
participating
peculiar
persistent
philosophical
pleasurable
pleasures
poetic
political
populace
populous
preached
principle
principles
propriety
provides
put
quadrangle
radically
rare
reason
represents
respecting
responsibility
retreating
reveals
roam
saints
same
saw
search
secular
selective
separated
shows
since
snatching
so
somewhat
soul
space
span
special
specificity
staged
static
staying
sustained
taking
tells
temple
that
theatre
their
thematic
these
this
thousand
three
through
to
today
together
too
took
twentieth
two
type
understanding
understood
unfolds
unparalleled
use
very
view
virtuous
walled
was
way
weaves
well
were
what
when
which
while
with
within
without
work
workshop
world
worth
years
yet
zhongyong
‘the
Sommario/riassunto: For almost three thousand years, Chinese life – from the city and the imperial palace, to the temple, the market, and the family home – was configured around the courtyard, as were the accomplishments of China’s artistic, philosophical, and institutional elites. Confucius’ Courtyard tells the story of how this most singular and persistent architectural form holds the key to understanding, even today, much of Chinese society and culture. Part architectural history, and part introduction to the cultural and philosophical history of China, the book explores the Chinese view of the world, and reveals the extent to which this is inextricably intertwined with the ancient concept of the courtyard, an architectural element and a way of life which has been almost entirely overlooked in China since 1949, and in the West for centuries. Along the way, it provides an accessible introduction to the Confucian doctrine of zhongyong (‘the Middle Way’), and the Chinese principles of the virtuous good life, and shows how these can only be fully understood through the humble courtyard – a space which is grounded in the earth, yet open to the heavens. Erudite and poetic, Confucius’ Courtyard weaves together architecture, philosophy, and cultural history to explore what lies at the very heart of Chinese civilization. How did the most populous nation on earth manage to live a virtuous as well as pleasurable life without the blessing from awesome God? What was the moral bedrock of this largely secular civilization? The Chinese, with a sustained interest over three millennia, desired an equilibrium: enjoying an earthly life for what it’s worth while maintaining a certain awe below Heaven’s arch; participating actively in society and taking responsibility for one’s family while snatching a moment away to indulge in life’s pleasures, or retreating to one’s inner world; and staying put in the house while letting the mind and soul roam freely beyond it. They managed, somewhat nonchalantly, to do so in and about the confines of their courtyard. Pitching in the middle was not only a way of living, but also a state of mind, as preached by Confucius. The Chinese gentry, along with the populace at large, held dear this doctrine, as an art of avoiding extremes and respecting the enduring in life. Since saints and innate moral defects in humans are rare, the middle way, in the Chinese mind, is virtuous, for it represents not a compromize, but a propriety that is humanly achievable, hence reason. Armed with this guiding principle, well established as early as 500 BCE in Confucius time, the Chinese in the next two and half millennia did not bother to change radically their view of the world. Such peculiar, and extraordinary, longevity was housed by the equally static quadrangle enclosure – the courtyard. From the house to their cosmic city, and anything in-between such as an imperial palace or a temple, market, workshop, theatre, and brothel, were all configured within the same walled compound. The Chinese saw no need to develop a bespoke building type to correspond to a special use, which the English took to an unparalleled level of specificity in the nineteenth century when work and living were separated, and assorted institutions emerged. This book, beginning with the celestial origin of the courtyard, embarks on a search for the meanings and shapes of Chinese life that, too, have been kept in check in the courtyard, secular but not materialistic. The middle way, as a philosophy, an artistic and political doctrine, and indeed a way of living, is staged in and about the courtyard in a time span from approximately 1000 BCE through to the middle of the twentieth century. Chinese life in this book, and especially the family and cultural life of the gentry, thematic and selective, unfolds in the courtyard following a chronology. The book is a history of the architecture of the Chinese courtyard as much as the life staged by it in all its facets.
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Titolo autorizzato: Confucius’ Courtyard  Visualizza cluster
Formato: Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione: Inglese
Record Nr.: VAN0241586
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Vanvitelli
Localizzazioni e accesso elettronico https://www.bloomsburycollections.com/book/confucius-courtyard-architecture-philosophy-and-the-good-life-in-china/
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