

An edition of Chinese Shadow Theatre (2007)
History, Popular Religion, and Women Warriors
By Fan Pen Li Chen
Publish Date
June 2007
Publisher
McGill-Queen's University Press
Language
eng
Pages
356
Description:
Chinese shadow theatre, a rare and ancient art from combining exquisite carvings with painting, music, singing, performance, and literature, owes its preservation to a non-elite, peripheral, and silent majority. In Chinese Shadow Theatre Fan Pen Li Chen documents and corrects misconceptions about this once-popular art form. Drawing on extensive research and fieldwork, she argues that these plays served a mainly religious function during the Qing dynasty and that the appeal of women warrior characters reflected the lower classes' high tolerance for the unorthodox and subversive. Chen examines the relationship between historical and fictional women warriors and those in military romances and shadow plays to demonstrate the significance of both printed works and oral transmission in the diffusion of popular culture. By linking traditional folk theatre to recent scholarship on drama, popular religion, and popular culture she shows that is a subject for serious academic study.
subjects: Chinese Puppet plays, Women soldiers in literature, Religion in literature, Shadow shows, History and criticism, History, Puppet plays, history and criticism, Chinese drama, history and criticism, Women soldiers, Women in popular culture, Chinese drama, Translations into English, Women in combat in popular culture, Théâtre d'ombres, Histoire, Théâtre de marionnettes chinois, Femmes dans la culture populaire, Femmes au combat dans la culture populaire, Théâtre chinois, Traductions anglaises
Places: China