Guanxi Master

The Search for the One Who Knows Everyone

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Archives
  • Contact Us

Rediscovering a Forgotten Beauty

Posted by Will | 12 October, 2011

Appreciation of Chinese Traditional Music from a Western Perspective

In these days of increasing communication between our two perspectives, and the enormous social implications of these exchanges, music has become the most important ambassador between our cultures. Music holds the keys to the most effective cultural exchange and mutual understanding, since it truly is the universal language. It can help us to overcome our bias and dislike for one another, and replace them with feelings of beauty and appreciation readily available through the experience of listening. Understanding music’s functions within both cultures, its background philosophy, its theory, and its meaning as a representative outside of its native culture, has become an essential area of cross-cultural study for musicians and language learners on both sides of the Pacific.

Read the rest of this entry »

The Lifecycle of the Village

Posted by Will | 11 October, 2011

Zhu Xi’s Canonization of the Life Cycle of the Village in “Family Rituals” (家礼 Jia Li)

In the 10th Century, the famous philosopher, Zhu Xi, undertook the task of gathering the rites and rituals of passage, and recorded them for future generations. Little did he know that this book would capture more than just the customs of the day; the “Jia Li” went on to become a classic in its own right, and would dictate almost a thousand more years of custom in China, Korea, Japan, and Vietnam. It was mainly the adherence to its code of conduct that defined the particular lifestyle of “Neo-Confucianism”.

Read the rest of this entry »

What the Chinese Want

Posted by Will | 4 October, 2011

What do the Chinese people want out of life? Many have tried to determine this, but no pattern has immediately appeared from the mass of contemporary literature or from the key phrases in the public forum that sufficiently defines the Chinese desire for a lifestyle direction in Chinese terms, apart from those without context, like “Modern” and “Contemporary”, which are derived more from China looking at other nations than looking at itself. The concept itself seems so abstract that many on the outside have been daunted by the possibility of finding it, but the tendency towards high abstraction is a characteristic of the Chinese people as a whole, and something to be admired rather than scorned. Like the figures in a painting, which suggest nature but retain their unnatural proportions, or like the meaning of a Chinese character, which is only a suggestion of a previous hieroglyph, so the abstractions of the Chinese dream cannot take form by compiling lists of contemporary manifestations. It is a compound idea that can only be grasped by those who can hold the qualities of Chinese philosophy on one hand, and balance the realities of an economically charged and internationalized China on the other. It is far subtler and more rewarding for those who find the silken strands of the Chinese cultural pact between man and nature pulled through two thousand years of literature, and tangled in the free-form bonsai trees of great philosophers’ thoughts, like strings that lead to the tales of shattered kites. When these strands are followed to the end, they lead to their source in an otherworldly paradise in an immortal’s peach garden.

Read the rest of this entry »

Living on Air

Posted by Will | 15 April, 2010

How the Chinese Ideal of Virtue Transmits to an Ethereal View of Business

My OrchidOn a delightful fall day a few years ago, while with my family on a Sunday jaunt in the rural Songjiang area of Shanghai, we pulled over to look at a roadside stall selling beautiful flowers in narrow pots, hanging from a rack. I was intrigued by the elaborate rig for these simple-looking, grassy plants, and was even more captivated by the smell of their little green flowers. I was hooked. I bought two pots and brought them home, and it was the start of my two-year, love-hate relationship with Chinese orchids.

Doing some preliminary research, I found that the cymbidium (our Latin name for the Chinese orchid) was one of the “Four Sacred Flowers” of Chinese tradition. One of the original features of the “Crystal Palace” of the first World Expo in 1851, it was notoriously hard to grow in hothouses in Victorian England, but its flowers are regarded as one of the most rewarding of the orchid species. Its delightful fragrance fills a room for weeks at a time.

And then, by chance, I stumbled upon an even more interesting fact. After seeing the orchids in my office, a painter friend immediately commented that I was “becoming a Chinese scholar”. “There is no flower that represents the scholar and his life better than the orchid”, he said with a wistful smile on his ancient face. “Why?” I asked innocently. “For that, you must look to Confucius!” he replied, in a mysterious way, and then changed the subject. This peaked my interest, and I started looking into it more. Read the rest of this entry »











Recent Articles

Rss
  • Return to the Peach Blossom Spring (Chapter 2)
  • Rediscovering a Forgotten Beauty
  • The Cult of Prosperity
  • The Lifecycle of the Village
  • Mahjong
  • What the Chinese Want
  • Return to the Peach Blossom Spring
  • Propagating the Mandate
  • Happy Chinese New Year!!!!!
  • The Collapse of the Village Ethic

Categories

  • Arts
  • China Government
  • Confucianism & Philosophy
  • Cultural Issues
  • DPRK
  • Historical China
  • International Relations
  • Korea
  • Korean History
  • Media
  • Modern China
  • North Korea
  • North Korean Art
  • Taoism
  • Tid-bits

Random Posts

  • Mahjong
  • All the Tea in China
  • Return to the Peach Blossom Spring
  • The Power of Poverty
  • The Collapse of the Village Ethic

Archives

  • February 2012
  • October 2011
  • July 2011
  • June 2011
  • February 2011
  • January 2011
  • December 2010
  • November 2010
  • October 2010
  • May 2010
  • April 2010
  • March 2010
  • December 2009

© 2012 Guanxi Master