previous session | next session
from the first page of an early print edition of the Cha jing
Session 13—Mon, Sep 26: Tang China ①: Cha jing tea manual (A)
Topics
❖ Tea Classic (Cha jing, ca. 760-761) by Lu Yu
❖ Yin-yang, five elements
Thoughts—read before class, revisit for tests
The Cha jing is the first of the tea manuals. It places tea for the first time within the discursive tradition of scholarly essay and intellectual history and by that its status more or less officially changes. There will be many other tea manuals but all will acknowledge this one as the first and founding text, even when offering different views. It remains the most frequently mentioned text. We read it with some care. In one way it is quite simple in content, but if read for its implications it grows in expressive power. Try to understand the implications of the statements made. Lu Yu titled his text Cha jing, and the "jing" asserts the canonical nature of his essay.
Required—to be completed for today's session
✓ Read up until "Notations" (so about the first half of the PDF file): Tea Classic (Cha Jing) Lu Yu 760 [bSpace, PDF].
Multimedia notes
❖ textextext
◊ textextext
Links
⇢ Cha jing in Chinese (Project Gutenberg): here
⇢ First three chapters of Cha jing in English at Qing Tea (also incorporated into the PDF reader on bSpace): here
Other
textextext
Links to each session page
Jan 23, W S01
Jan 25, F S02
Jan 28, M S03
Jan 30, W S04
Feb 1, F S05
Feb 4, M S06
Feb 6, W S07
Feb 8, F S08
Feb 11, M S09
Feb 13, W S10
Feb 15, F
S11
Feb 19, W S12
Feb 21, F S13
Feb 25, M S14
Feb 27, W S15
Mar 1, F S16
Mar 4, M S17
Mar 6, W S18-Midterm
Mar 8, F S19
Mar 11, M S20
Mar 13, W S21
Mar 15, F
S22
Mar 18, M S23
Mar 20, W S24
Mar 22, F S25
Apr 1, M S26
Apr 3, W S27
Apr 5, F S28-Midterm
Apr 8, M S29
Apr 10, W S30
Apr 12, F S31
Apr 15, M S32
Apr 17, W S33
Apr 19, F
S34
Apr 22, M S35
Apr 24, W S36
Apr 26, F S37
Apr 29, M S38-Midterm
May 1, W S39
May 3, F S40
May 6, M (RRR)
May 8, W (RRR)
May 10, F (RRR)
May 14, Tu FINAL