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Nominal Things: Bronzes in the Making of Medieval China

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SKU 9780226822464 Categories ,
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How the medieval study of ancient bronzes influenced the production of knowledge and the making of things in East Asia.   This book opens in eleventh-century China, where scholars were the first in world history to systematically illustrate and document ancient artifacts. ...

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Description

Product ID:9780226822464
Product Form:Hardback
Country of Manufacture:GB
Title:Nominal Things
Subtitle:Bronzes in the Making of Medieval China
Authors:Author: Jeffrey Moser
Page Count:336
Subjects:History of art, Oriental art, History of art, Semantics, discourse analysis, stylistics, Asian history, History of art: Byzantine & Medieval art c 500 CE to c 1400, Semantics, discourse analysis, etc, Asian history, China
Description:Select Guide Rating
How the medieval study of ancient bronzes influenced the production of knowledge and the making of things in East Asia.   This book opens in eleventh-century China, where scholars were the first in world history to systematically illustrate and document ancient artifacts. As Jeffrey Moser argues, the visual, technical, and conceptual mechanisms they developed to record these objects laid the foundations for methods of visualizing knowledge that scholars throughout early modern East Asia would use to make sense of the world around them.   Of the artifacts these scholars studied, the most celebrated were bronze ritual vessels that had been cast nearly two thousand years earlier. While working to make sense of the relationship between the bronzes’ complex shapes and their inscribed glyphs, they came to realize that the objects were “nominal things”—objects inscribed with names that identified their own categories and uses. Eleventh-century scholars knew the meaning of these glyphs from hallowed Confucian writings that had been passed down through centuries, but they found shocking disconnects between the names and the bronzes on which they were inscribed. Nominal Things traces the process by which a distinctive system of empiricism was nurtured by discrepancies between the complex materiality of the bronzes and their inscriptions. By revealing the connections between the new empiricism and older ways of knowing, the book explains how scholars refashioned the words of the Confucian classics into material reality.  
Imprint Name:University of Chicago Press
Publisher Name:The University of Chicago Press
Country of Publication:GB
Publishing Date:2023-04-20