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13 - Music and performing arts: tradition, reform and political and social relevance

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 May 2009

Kam Louie
Affiliation:
Australian National University, Canberra
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Summary

This chapter takes up some of the main genres of modern Chinese culture that come under the general heading of music and performing arts. The traditional forms include traditional theatre (xiqu); traditional dance; folk songs (min'ge); narrative singing (shuochang or quyi); and traditional instrumental music (qiyue). Modern forms include the modern spoken play called the huaju; several other forms that were influenced greatly by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), such as opera (geju, literally 'song drama') and 'dance drama' (wuju); and music introduced from outside China, especially the West. Some attention will be given to how the main forms have developed since the early years of the twentieth century, and to how these forms interacted with the society and the politics of the day. The chapter will adopt a basically, though not entirely, chronological structure. However, it will make no attempt at a consolidated discussion of all these genres. Rather, it will use examples from them to illustrate important themes. Since the early years of the twentieth century, three in some ways related themes have dominated China's music and performing arts. These are: how to reform or preserve them to maintain their popularity and relevance; the ability of the performing arts to change society; and the dichotomy between Chinese traditional and Western or Soviet forms. Some new genres have emerged under Western influence, but they have not simply followed the original models exactly. Although many traditions persist into the twenty-first century, no previous century has witnessed more thorough-going change in China's music and performing arts than the twentieth century.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2008

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