Xin Wen's upcoming talk

S
secretary@songyuan.org
Sun, Feb 21, 2021 11:08 PM

Hello everyone,
Professor Xin Wen, a member of our society, is going to deliver a talk
at UCLA this week. Below is the information on the talk.

The webinar will be live on Zoom, on Thursday (Feb 25), 4 PM (Pacific
Standard Time).  Below please find the registration link to the webinar
and a synopsis of the talk:

Registration: https://www.international.ucla.edu/ccs/event/14817

Capital of the Past: Urban and Cultural Transformations of Chang’an, 900

  • 1400

In this talk, I examine the history of Chang’an, the capital the Tang
(618–907) dynasty, after the fall of the Tang. My story begins with the
forced evacuation of the imperial court from Chang’an in 904, and ends
with the construction of the new Ming-era city and the renaming of the
city as “Xi’an” in the late 14th century. Using local gazetteers,
travelogues, and later inscriptions on Tang stone monuments in the
“Forest of Stele” (beilin) collection that was first assembled in 1087,
I trace two major urban transformations of the city: as the new Chang’an
downsized to about 1/16 of the Tang city, it also relinquished its
erstwhile political role and assumed the new identity as a militarized
border town. At the same time, however, visitors and residents continued
to recollect and reinscribe Chang’an’s imperial past. In this version of
its imperial history often invoked in these five centuries, Chang’an was
neither a symbol of Tang imperial power, nor one of Eurasian
cosmopolitanism, as it is often seen now. Instead, the part of the
history of Chang’an most celebrated was its place as the center of a
literary culture for examination candidates in the mid- and late Tang;
and because these examination candidates were largely active in the
southeastern part of the Tang city, this area, which was in the
southeastern suburbs after the 904 downsizing, became the center of
attraction for visitors. By tracing the parallel yet contradictory urban
and cultural transformations, this project charts a northern path for
the understanding of urban history in Middle Period China.

Xin Wen is an Assistant Professor of East Asian Studies and History at
Princeton University. He graduated from Harvard University in 2017 with
a Ph.D. in Inner Asian and Altaic Studies. He is a historian of medieval
China and Inner Asia, and is currently finishing a book manuscript that
is a social history of long-distance diplomatic travel on the Silk Road
written on the basis of Dunhuang documents. His research interests in
medieval China also include manuscript culture, urban history, and
digital humanities.

Sincerely,
Ya Zuo

Hello everyone, Professor Xin Wen, a member of our society, is going to deliver a talk at UCLA this week. Below is the information on the talk. The webinar will be live on Zoom, on Thursday (Feb 25), 4 PM (Pacific Standard Time). Below please find the registration link to the webinar and a synopsis of the talk: Registration: https://www.international.ucla.edu/ccs/event/14817 Capital of the Past: Urban and Cultural Transformations of Chang’an, 900 - 1400 In this talk, I examine the history of Chang’an, the capital the Tang (618–907) dynasty, after the fall of the Tang. My story begins with the forced evacuation of the imperial court from Chang’an in 904, and ends with the construction of the new Ming-era city and the renaming of the city as “Xi’an” in the late 14th century. Using local gazetteers, travelogues, and later inscriptions on Tang stone monuments in the “Forest of Stele” (beilin) collection that was first assembled in 1087, I trace two major urban transformations of the city: as the new Chang’an downsized to about 1/16 of the Tang city, it also relinquished its erstwhile political role and assumed the new identity as a militarized border town. At the same time, however, visitors and residents continued to recollect and reinscribe Chang’an’s imperial past. In this version of its imperial history often invoked in these five centuries, Chang’an was neither a symbol of Tang imperial power, nor one of Eurasian cosmopolitanism, as it is often seen now. Instead, the part of the history of Chang’an most celebrated was its place as the center of a literary culture for examination candidates in the mid- and late Tang; and because these examination candidates were largely active in the southeastern part of the Tang city, this area, which was in the southeastern suburbs after the 904 downsizing, became the center of attraction for visitors. By tracing the parallel yet contradictory urban and cultural transformations, this project charts a northern path for the understanding of urban history in Middle Period China. Xin Wen is an Assistant Professor of East Asian Studies and History at Princeton University. He graduated from Harvard University in 2017 with a Ph.D. in Inner Asian and Altaic Studies. He is a historian of medieval China and Inner Asia, and is currently finishing a book manuscript that is a social history of long-distance diplomatic travel on the Silk Road written on the basis of Dunhuang documents. His research interests in medieval China also include manuscript culture, urban history, and digital humanities. Sincerely, Ya Zuo