淮南子的音景:中国早期的诗歌、表演、哲学与实践

IF 0.3 3区 社会学 0 ASIAN STUDIES
Early China Pub Date : 2022-07-14 DOI:10.1017/eac.2022.6
Peter Tsung Kei 棕琦 Wong 王
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要本文认为,在中国早期,口头表演可能是一种哲学活动。重点是淮南子,一个密集押韵的哲学论文,由刘安在公元前二世纪编写。我表明,大部头包含各种声音相关的诗歌形式,不仅是为了使文本表现,而且通过听觉模仿,鼓励直观理解其哲学信息。因此,古诗、哲学或思想史的学者,尽管习惯于默读和观察学科界限,但应该注意这些声音模式,以便公正地对待这篇文章的诗歌和哲学的丰富性和原创性。更重要的是,我认为这些诗歌形式使读者和观众能够体验,体现,最重要的是,通过文本表演来制定方式。由于淮南子的声音模式,听觉阅读和哲学实践的躯体过程可以同时发生。发声成为一种可操作和可重复的精神练习,有助于直观理解和内化哲学价值。换句话说,长期存在的知行鸿沟被淮南子英勇地填补了。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
THE SOUNDSCAPE OF THE HUAINANZI 淮南子: POETRY, PERFORMANCE, PHILOSOPHY, AND PRAXIS IN EARLY CHINA
Abstract This article proposes that oral performance could be a philosophical activity in early China. The focus is on the Huainanzi, a densely rhymed philosophical treatise compiled by Liu An in the second century b.c.e. I show that the tome contains various sound-correlated poetic forms that are intended not only to enable textual performance but also, by means of aural mimesis, to encourage the intuitive understanding of its philosophical messages. Thus scholars of ancient poetry, philosophy, or intellectual history, despite being habituated to reading silently and observing disciplinary boundaries, should be attentive to these sonic patterns in order to do justice to the poetic-cum-philosophical richness and originality of this text. More importantly, I argue that these poetic forms enable readers and audiences to experience, embody, and, above all, enact the Way through textual performance. Thanks to the sound patterns of the Huainanzi, the somatic processes of aural reading and philosophical praxis can occur simultaneously. Vocalization becomes an actionable and repeatable spiritual exercise, which facilitates the intuitive understanding and internalization of philosophical values. In other words, the perennial knowing–doing gap is heroically closed by the Huainanzi.
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来源期刊
Early China
Early China ASIAN STUDIES-
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
21
期刊介绍: Early China publishes original research on all aspects of the culture and civilization of China from earliest times through the Han dynasty period (CE 220). The journal is interdisciplinary in scope, including articles on Chinese archaeology, history, philosophy, religion, literature, and paleography. It is the only English-language journal to publish solely on early China, and to include information on all relevant publications in all languages. The journal is of interest to scholars of archaeology and of other ancient cultures as well as sinologists.
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