• Title/Summary/Keyword: 후스

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Chinese Literary Circles of 1919 -The New Youth Literary Coterie (1919년 중국의 문단 - 『신청년』 그룹을 중심으로 -)

  • 이보경
    • CONCEPT AND COMMUNICATION
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    • no.23
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    • pp.69-103
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    • 2019
  • This essay explores Chinese literary circles of 1919, specifically the New Youth literary coterie. The changes which occurred during this period are examined through a chronological account of the tensions and interactions which arose between contributors to New Youth and other literary publications, especially The Weekly Review and Renaissance. The founding of The Weekly Review by some of the New Youth literary coterie displayed their competitive ethos as well as their hopes for the "new era" as a expression of "mutual assistance." Renaissance was founded by Peking University students, and the editors of New Youth saw it as a useful platform to promote their ideas to the younger generation. The editors of Renaissance described themselves as "night cats" and "brazier flames," and they distinguished themselves from earlier generations through their relentless academic fervor. These three publications, New Youth, The Weekly Review, and Renaissance, together formed an influential triangle which successfully dominated Chinese literary circles by scapegoating traditional intellectuals in their quest to establish the new era. After the May Fourth Movement, however, their paths divided. Following the arrest of Chen Duxiu, Hu Shi sought to change the direction of The Weekly Review by focusing on "problems." This reinforced the academic emphasis of Renaissance, and in contrast New Youth became politically more radical, starting with a "Special Issue on Marxism," and also relocated from Shanghai to Beijing. Chinese literary circles subsequently became increasingly concerned with academic trends and political issues. Interestingly, the New Youth literary coterie became ashamed of their former stance, which encouraged their role in the independence movement of Choson Korea.

Tosa Mitsuyoshi's Screen Paintings Gathering on the Year's First "Day of the Rat" and Boating on the Oi River from the National Museum of Korea (국립중앙박물관 소장 도사 미쓰요시(土佐光芳) 필(筆) <무라사키노 자일 놀이(紫野子日遊圖)·오이강 유람도 병풍(大井川遊覽圖屛風)> 시론)

  • Jung, Miyeon
    • MISULJARYO - National Museum of Korea Art Journal
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    • v.98
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    • pp.176-199
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    • 2020
  • In 2018, the National Museum of Korea purchased a pair of Japanese folding screens, respectively entitled Gathering on the Year's First "Day of the Rat" and Boating on the Oi River. Both of these two screens (hereinafter collectively referred to as the "NMK edition") have a gold background that bears the seal and ink inscription of Tosa Mitsuyoshi (1700-1772), who served as edokoro azukari, a painter in the court of Kyoto. According to the seller in New York, the screens were brought from Japan to the United States in the early twentieth century, but no other details are known. Each folding screen has six panels. The screen on the right (i.e., Gathering…) depicts "nenohi no asobi," an annual event conducted on the first "day of the rat" (according to the Asian zodiacal calendar), wherein the Kyoto imperial court ventured to the woods to gather pine seedlings. The left screen (i.e., Boating…) shows three boats traveling down the Oi River in Kyoto, representing the ritual known as "mifune" (literally, "three boats"), which involves three boats representing Chinese classical poetry (kansi), Japanese classical poetry (waka), and Japanese imperial music and dance (gagaku). Notably, these two screens are identical in theme and iconography to two screens with the same respective titles that were commissioned by Emperor Komei (1831-1867) and painted by Ukita Ikkei (1795-1859), an artist of the Yamato-e Revivalist School (fukko yamato-e), now in the collection of Sennyu-ji Temple in Kyoto (hereinafter collectively referred to as the "Sennyu edition"). While both of these themes have been painted independently numerous times, the NMK edition and Sennyu edition are the only known cases of the themes being painted as a single set. According to Diary of Official Business Between the Court and Shogunate (the journal of a court official named Hirohashi Kanetane, 1715-1781), Tosa Mitsuyoshi was commissioned in 1760 to replace the fusuma (rectangular sliding panels) of Tsunegoten, one of the buildings of the Kyoto Imperial Palace, which had been built in 1709. Notably, records show that Tsunegoten once contained a series of fusuma painted by an artist of the Kano school on the themes "Outdoor Procession on a Spring Day" and "Three Boats Cruising on the Oi River." Hence, it seems probable that Tosa Mitsuyoshi was influenced by the theme and iconography of the existing fusuma in producing his own folding screens depicting the court's visit to the forest and a cruise on the Oi River. While the practice of collecting pine seedlings on the first "rat day" of the year was an auspicious event to pray for longevity, the mifune ritual was intended to honor the greatest talents of the three aforementioned arts, which were of crucial importance to the court of Kyoto. Folding screens with such auspicious themes were commonly featured at the ceremony to enthrone the emperor or empress. Significantly, the Diary of Official Business Between the Court and Shogunate also records that Tosa Mitsuyoshi, while working as a court artist, produced two pairs of folding screens for the coronation of Empress Go Sakuramachi (1762-1771), which was held in 1763. Hence, research suggests that the NMK edition is one of the pairs of royal folding screens produced at that time.