◀ previous session | next session ►
China landform map with the Bashu States (Sichuan) region super-imposed
Session 10: Pre-Tang China ②: Up through Han dynasty
Topics
❖ Early contacts with Chinese (Han) culture—Very early Chinese tea culture
Thoughts—read before class, revisit for tests
The Contract for a Youth is an important document to us. It will be used as our one certain early date. Please don't skip it, and remember it.
Required—to be completed for today's session
✓ Read: Chinese National Tea Museum, English page on history [internet link, Link updated Feb 13, 2013, the site itself, too, has been improved] (pre-Tang portions only, and you can skip the opening about Shen Nong. The "Bashu states" mentioned on this site were collectively in the Sichuan area. See this map.)
✓ Read: Very Early Encounters [bSpace, PPT]
✓ Read: Contract for a Youth [bSpace, PDF]
✓ Read: Chinese Tea Culture (Wang Ling, 2000) Chpt 1 [bSpace, PDF] (right-pointing arrow means start reading, left-pointing arrow means stop reading)
✓ Read up through the Han dynasty: Tea in China (Evans, 1992) Chpt 4 [bSpace, PDF]
*Both Wang Ling and John C. Evans need to be read skeptically (Evans in all cases, Wang Ling for the early material). Also, they are OCRed and have quite a few spelling errors, missing words, etc. in them. If you need to check something, use the JPEG version found in the "PDFs from JPEGs" folder.
Multimedia notes
◊ I might present in class on this day some very brief clips of tea preparation and presentation found in "Battle at Red Cliff" (John Woo, 2008). Historical accuracy to Han Dynasty tea drinking is marginal, but I list it here anyway, if you want to review what I showed in class. Regardless of historical accuracy, it does support the theme of tea's current place within culture (how it is depicted in modern films):
- Scene One (starting around 9:45, shows a glimpses of a woman toasting the tea leaf perhaps and boiling the water, but the main focus is on the music playing)
- Scene One, cont. (this is the continuation of part 5, and shows a woman ladling the tea and serving it)
- Scene Two (starts at time 9:00, a woman serves tea)
... (Spring 2013) Unfortunately, the above links are broken. Red Cliff is on Netflix, but I haven't have a chance to mark the time. Tea scenes are scattered throughout, however. This doesn't provide Han dynasty information, but does represent some of the standard cultural symbolic meanings of tea in modern Asia.
Links
⇢ None other than those mentioned above.
Other
None.
Links to each session page
Sun, Sept 1, 2013: I am migrating this site to a new site. It takes time. During this transition, there are two ways to access a particular day's web page. You can start with the new EA109 Fall 2013 Course Guide page, our official top page. It will take you directly to the new pages and redirect to old pages when necessary. Or you can use the below chart. It will take you directly to the day's session page—the new one when it exists, the old one when it has yet to be migrated. Greenhighlight means the new page exists. Sorry for the dust and mess during construction!
Aug 30, F S01
Sep 4, W S02
Sep 6, F S03
Sep 9, M S04
Sep 11, W S05
Sep 13, F S06
Sep 16, M S07
Sep 18, W S08
Sep 20, F S09
Sep 23, M S10
Sep 25, W S11
Sep 27, F S12
Sep 30, M S13
Oct 2, W S14
Oct 4, F S15
Oct 7, M S16
Oct 9, W S17
Oct 11, F S18-Midterm
Oct 14, M S19
Oct 16, W S20
Oct 18, F S21
Oct 21, M S22
Oct 23, W S23
Oct 25, F S24
Oct 28, M S25
Oct 30, W S26
Nov 1, F S27
Nov 4, M S28-Midterm
Nov 6, W S29
Nov 8, F S30
Nov 13, W S31
Nov 15, F S32
Nov 18, M S33
Nov 20, W S34
Nov 22, F S35
Nov 25, W S36
Nov 27, F S37
Dec 2, M S38-Midterm
Dec 4, W S39
Dec 6, F S40
Dec 9, M (RRR)
Dec 11, W (RRR)
Dec 13, F (RRR)
Dec 19 3-6PM, Th FINAL