The past as a prologue: aspirations for the future portrayed in Chinese vernacular miniature monuments

Whether to look to the past is a perennial dilemma, as the past evokes both terror and pleasure. Focusing on miniature monuments built for ancestors in the context of pre-modern China, this study reveals that while the peak period of production of miniature monuments occurred during the Han dynasty,...

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Main Authors: Mengbi Li, Elmira Jamei
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2025-01-01
Series:Journal of Asian Architecture and Building Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13467581.2023.2287197
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author Mengbi Li
Elmira Jamei
author_facet Mengbi Li
Elmira Jamei
author_sort Mengbi Li
collection DOAJ
description Whether to look to the past is a perennial dilemma, as the past evokes both terror and pleasure. Focusing on miniature monuments built for ancestors in the context of pre-modern China, this study reveals that while the peak period of production of miniature monuments occurred during the Han dynasty, the miniature monument building practice can be traced to living cases today. This paper highlights a phenomenon, a vision of the future imagined by descendants was integrated into a dialogue with the past through the agency of symbolic representations of buildings constructed for the deceased. Architecture, in this sense, acted as a facilitator of difficult communication with the deceased and conveyed profound desires that people strongly embraced but could not articulate. Such desires and dreams may not be accommodated in reality, but constructing miniature monuments in honour of ancestors reiterates that architecture is a spiritual home for brave imaginations and deep desires of people.
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series Journal of Asian Architecture and Building Engineering
spelling doaj-art-2986eb2adea9451ba4a96eb6e9e9f4402025-01-02T11:34:20ZengTaylor & Francis GroupJournal of Asian Architecture and Building Engineering1347-28522025-01-01241162610.1080/13467581.2023.22871972287197The past as a prologue: aspirations for the future portrayed in Chinese vernacular miniature monumentsMengbi Li0Elmira Jamei1Victoria UniversityVictoria UniversityWhether to look to the past is a perennial dilemma, as the past evokes both terror and pleasure. Focusing on miniature monuments built for ancestors in the context of pre-modern China, this study reveals that while the peak period of production of miniature monuments occurred during the Han dynasty, the miniature monument building practice can be traced to living cases today. This paper highlights a phenomenon, a vision of the future imagined by descendants was integrated into a dialogue with the past through the agency of symbolic representations of buildings constructed for the deceased. Architecture, in this sense, acted as a facilitator of difficult communication with the deceased and conveyed profound desires that people strongly embraced but could not articulate. Such desires and dreams may not be accommodated in reality, but constructing miniature monuments in honour of ancestors reiterates that architecture is a spiritual home for brave imaginations and deep desires of people.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13467581.2023.2287197the pastchinaarchitectural modelmingqizuxianfang
spellingShingle Mengbi Li
Elmira Jamei
The past as a prologue: aspirations for the future portrayed in Chinese vernacular miniature monuments
Journal of Asian Architecture and Building Engineering
the past
china
architectural model
mingqi
zuxianfang
title The past as a prologue: aspirations for the future portrayed in Chinese vernacular miniature monuments
title_full The past as a prologue: aspirations for the future portrayed in Chinese vernacular miniature monuments
title_fullStr The past as a prologue: aspirations for the future portrayed in Chinese vernacular miniature monuments
title_full_unstemmed The past as a prologue: aspirations for the future portrayed in Chinese vernacular miniature monuments
title_short The past as a prologue: aspirations for the future portrayed in Chinese vernacular miniature monuments
title_sort past as a prologue aspirations for the future portrayed in chinese vernacular miniature monuments
topic the past
china
architectural model
mingqi
zuxianfang
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13467581.2023.2287197
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AT elmirajamei pastasaprologueaspirationsforthefutureportrayedinchinesevernacularminiaturemonuments