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The Promise and Peril of Things: Literature and Material Culture in Late Imperial China By Wai-yee Li. New York: Columbia University Press, 2022. 362 pp. $140 (cloth), $35.00 (paper), $34.99 (eBook).

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The Promise and Peril of Things: Literature and Material Culture in Late Imperial China By Wai-yee Li. New York: Columbia University Press, 2022. 362 pp. $140 (cloth), $35.00 (paper), $34.99 (eBook).

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2022

Bruce Rusk*
Affiliation:
University of British Columbia
*
*Corresponding author. Email: bruce.rusk@ubc.ca
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Abstract

Type
Book Review
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press

Wai-yee Li's study looks closely at the tensions around the ownership, accumulation, and transmission of valuable things in the late Ming and early Qing, with a particular focus on objects highly esteemed by, or with deep personal and shared meaning for, male literati. It combines close readings of texts in multiple genres—fiction, drama, poetry, and occasional prose—with discussion of the wider sociocultural setting within which real objects changed hands and human lives were shaped by the trajectories of the things in question.

After an introduction, the book is divided into four longish chapters, each covering one major theme. “People and Things” examines how human actors related to things they owned, sought, and lost, as well as how people and things could be exchanged, literally and conceptually. Chapter 2, “Elegance and Vulgarity,” starts from the categories of ya 雅 and su 俗 that defined many elite ideals of proper person–thing relationships and that grounded models of taste and proper consumption by which things and people were judged. “The Real and the Fake,” the theme of the third chapter, was a ubiquitous but unstable dichotomy in the period, with fakes and other kinds of copy being a frequent worry but also an accepted part of the material legacy of the past, while those who created them were derided or celebrated, depending on context. The final chapter, “Lost and Found,” examines the mediation of historical and personal memory through things, whether these were real and accessible or lost and preserved only in the mind and on the page—a mode that became particularly prominent following the fall of the Ming, as loyalists and others struggled with the trauma of dynastic loss and the paradoxes of survival.

The themes of the book permeate Ming-Qing literature and reward the sustained engagement with them here. The texts engaged with include both familiar ones such as Jinping mei and Honglou meng and a range of lesser-known poems, stories, and biji writings. The objects on which these texts hinge include many of the most valuable things that the elite prized in the Ming-Qing period: calligraphy, paintings, porcelain, jade, stationery, musical instruments, clothing, as well as a few more mundane and even perishable items such as foods and flowers. In that sense, the topic of the book is not “material culture” in full, but the subset of it that circulated as luxury goods or that took on heightened symbolic value in literary expression.

The ordinary things that form the infrastructure of daily life are thus largely unremarked upon in the sources the book draws on. Even when quotidian minutiae are inventoried, in a work like Jinping mei, they are usually markedly extravagant versions of necessities like clothing and furniture. By the same token, the analysis here is driven by what things do, and principally what people do with and about them, in written texts. Occasional mention is made, especially in Chapter 3, of the fact that for many Ming and Qing writers things had a force, sometimes a destiny, perhaps even a will and a mind of their own. However, Li's readings of texts and history do not forefront the agency of things, at least not beyond the confines of the diegetic worlds they inhabit. The book is thus an analysis of things within literature, rather than of material culture and of literature interacting with it. This distinguishes it from some other recent studies that consider how things, and people who did not write but who produced and otherwise interacted with things, could create new possibilities for themselves and for people. For example, the now well-studied interest in optics and trompe-l’œil visuality that spread from eighteenth century court culture, embodied inter alia in the description of Jia Baoyu's quarters in Honglou meng, can be seen as more than just a new topic of literary description (155–57, 209–11). New things (lenses, plate-glass mirrors) and new material techniques (single-point perspective, realist painting) made possible new modes of perception, presentation, representation, and misrepresentation, both visual and verbal. It would add a further layer of meaning to read some of the sources in light of how the historical or fictional things in them, and the real things in the world of their creators, helped bring them about.

Li's analysis instead traces the concepts named in her chapter titles to their origins in earlier periods of Chinese history, as far back as the Warring States—Chapters One, Two, and Three all open with etymological inquiries into the origins of their central keywords, each following the development of the terms up to the Ming. Li goes on to explore how the complexities of these ideas were worked out by Ming-Qing writers. For example, “real and fake,” at first blush the most straightforward of these pairings, turns out in Chapter Three to be full of ambiguities: some spurious copies were authorized, or recognized post facto, by their putative creators. The same polarity, in history and fiction alike, applies to the human side: Li draws out the interplay of fake and genuine in both people and things in the chuanqi play Yi peng xue (An Offering of Snow) by Li Yù (ca. 1610–after 1667), in which people take one another's place in a tragic sequence of events set off by the infamous rapacity and corruption of Yan Song (1480–1565) and his son Shifan (d. 1565), whose pursuit of a jade cup leads to several deaths—including, eventually, his own (183–91).

An even more intricate plot links a larger cast of objects and people in Yizhong yuan (Ideal Matches), by the better-known and unrelated Li Yu (1610–1680). Two literati men (Chen Jiru and Dong Qichang) are paired with two courtesan artists (Yang Yunyou and Lin Tiansu) who are their matches because of, not despite, their careers as forgers of the two men's work. But the couples can be united only after a series of maskings and unmaskings that sublimate, or even sublate, tensions over the self-interested economic logic of the fake and turn it into a form of genuine self-expression. Li notes that in this dramatized context, as in many others, the act of faking does not become a moral or political issue (191–209).

The book as a whole offers a wealth of examples and close readings, though some may be harder to follow for those not immersed in the sources (portions on Jinping mei and Honglou meng, in particular, may be opaque to readers unfamiliar with these novels). The book is well-produced by Columbia University Press, reading smoothly and without typographical errors. One limitation is in the printing of Chinese characters, which appear sparingly in the main text (for terms discussed but not for proper names, which are thus difficult to identify without access to the sources), systematically in the bibliography, and not at all in the index.

Li has published extensively in both English and Chinese on collecting and connoisseurship in the Ming-Qing period and on the literature of the time more broadly. This volume brings the two together seamlessly, framed by questions about how the human and the material interacted and how things still acted as sources of meaning even when they outlasted the world to which they belonged (for instance the vanished Ming, in early Qing memory) or when they themselves were gone, surviving only in memory or in writing.