Cover image for Foreign influences on Chinese mystical horse imagery
Foreign influences on Chinese mystical horse imagery
Title:
Foreign influences on Chinese mystical horse imagery
Author:
Burruss, Susan Langhorne.
ISBN:
9780599412019
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (111 p.).
General Note:
Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 37-06, page: 1539.
Adviser: Rosemary Smith.
Abstract:
Representations of the horse developed parallel to significant cultural elements at the dawn of China's vast history. As early as the Shang Dynasty (1766-1045 BC) images of the horse appeared on oracle bones. After its first appearance on oracle bones the horse remained highly significant and mystical representations of the horse continue to be a feature in Chinese art into the late twentieth century.

This study will focus specifically on representations of the horse as a mystical creature in Chinese art, as distinct from general equine imagery. Mystical equine imagery can possess characteristics associated with other animal species or mythological beings. I will establish the impact of foreign cultures on the Chinese perception of the horse as mystical. Outside elements include aspects of religion, mythology, legends, ritual, and folklore. It will be seen that these elements, combined with the indigenous mystical beliefs in China, were influential in Chinese representations of the horse as a mystical creature.

Ancient legends and myths of supernatural horses existed at an early period in China and were manifest in representation of mystical horses. Through contact with outside cultures along the silk routes the indigenous notions of the horse as a mystical creature were reinforced in China. The sheer amount of equine imagery in general in Chinese art and the obvious connections to early religious belief systems apparent in mystical representations of the horse in particular, suggest the significance of this topic. While scholars often acknowledge this in passing, to date there is no systematic study specifically of the mystical representation of the horse in Chinese art. This thesis will provide this information which is crucial for a thorough understanding of this significant subject in Chinese art. (Abstract shortened by UMI.).
Local Note:
School code: 2383.
Subject Term:
Electronic Access:
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Thesis Note:
Thesis (M.A.)--Virginia Commonwealth University, 1999.
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