New Books on Chinese Manuscript Culture

Published three books on Chinese calligraphy and painting last year, i.e., Hiding the Tip: Gateway to Chinese Calligraphy, Ink Bamboo in Chinese Poetry and Painting, and Dao, Neo-Confucian Principle, and Chan Buddhism in Chinese Calligraphy and Painting (Winner of the second China Fine Arts Award), Professor Wen Xing, Chair Professor and Director of DIC at Dartmouth, just published two new books on Chinese Manuscript Culture this year, An Explorative Study of the Chu Bamboo-Slip Calligraphy: The Calligraphy of the Xinian Curated by Tsinghua University, A Perspective of Chinese Manuscript Culture
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and Orchid Pavilion in Chinese Manuscript Culture.
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Chinese Manuscript Culture: An Interview with CSST

The study of Chinese Manuscript Culture and The Dartmouth Institute for Calligraphy and Manuscript Culture in China (DIC) were covered by Chinese Social Sciences Today (CSST), the prominent newspaper in social sciences and humanities in China. Proposed by Prof. Wen Xing as both a particular approach and an academic field, Chinese Manuscript Culture has been an effective way of experiential learning of traditional Chinese culture at Dartmouth, according to the CSST interview on page 3, 23 October 2015.
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Silk Painting from the SSCP

Established in 1979, Social Sciences in China Press (SSCP) has been the leading publisher in social sciences and humanities in China. It is the publisher who publishes China’s most prominent academic journals, such as the Chinese and the English editions of Social Sciences in China. The silk painting below was a gift from Prof. Wang Limin, the Executive Deputy Editor-in-Chief of SSCP, when he visited Dartmouth’s calligraphy and manuscript culture institute in October.
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