Institute for Australian and Asian Arts and Culture
Toggle navigation
-
- [NEW] Sandy Edwards: A Backward Glance at Australian Feminism
- Connecting and Connections
- Owen Leong: Bitten Peach 分桃
- Portraits of Women: Amani Haydar
- Hidden Treasures Virtual Gallery
- History Reimagined: Shen Jiawei and NC Qin
- Individual and Universal: the World We Share
- Warren Duncan Exhibition: Australians in 1970’s China
- Traditions & Transformations
- Geng Xue Solo Exhibition 2
- Red Heart of Australia
- William Yang Exhibition: Claiming Heritage
- Wang Lan's Art: A Lyrical Language 牧歌
- Exhibitions 2022
- Exhibitions 2021
- Exhibitions 2020
- Exhibitions 2019
- Exhibitions 2018
- Exhibitions 2016-2017
-
- IAC Art Talks Series 3 Lecture 2: Vomit Girl Beyond Diasporic Trauma Dr Mai Nguyễn-Long (Catch up Online)
- IAC Art Talks Series 3 Lecture 1: Australian Performing Arts Managers’ Delegation to China by Carrillo Gantner AC (Catch up Online)
- IAC Art Talks Series 2 Lecture 6 - Articulating Trajectories: Connecting with Chinese Heritage Through Drawing & Listening by Dr Cindy Chen (Catch up Online)
- IAC Art Talks Series 2 Lecture 5: The Inner World of Chinese Classical Painting by Dr Richard Wu (Catch up Online)
- IAC Art Talks Series 2 Lecture Four: Storytelling: Chinese Migrants Through Papercutting by Dr Tianli Zu (Catch up Online)
- IAC Art Talk Series 2 Lecture Three: Life's Journey in Art & Architecture by Simon Chan AM (Catch up Online)
- IAC Art Talks Series 2 Lecture Two : Rethinking the Chinese Art Curator’s Role: A Case Study in Australia by Yin Cao (Catch up Online)
- IAC Art Talks Series 2 Lecture One: The Accidental Collector by Dr Geoff Raby AO (Catch up Online)
- IAC Art Talks Lecture 7: Chinese Art in Australian Public Collections by Jackie Menzies OAM (Catch up Online)
- IAC Art Talks Lecture 6: Chinese Modernist Artists and the Literati Spirit: the Life and Work of Lin Fengmian and Sanyu by Dapeng Liu (Catch up Online)
- IAC Art Talks Lecture 5: The Secret History of Chinoiserie by Chris Chun (Catch up Online)
- IAC Art Talks Lecture 4: New Export China: Reconciling Surface and Depth in Ah Xian’s Porcelain Busts by Dr Alex Burchmore (Catch up Online)
- IAC Art Talks Lecture 3: Chance Encounters: Untold Tales of Great Journeys made by some Chinese Paintings found in Australia by Yvett Klein (Catch up Online)
- IAC Art Talks Lecture 2: Half the Sky: Women Artists in Modern and Contemporary Chinese Art by Dr Luise Guest (Catch up Online)
- IAC Art Talks Inaugural Lecture: Identity, Position, Presence by Dr Guan Wei (Catch up Online)
-
- IAC Culture Talks Series 3 Lecture Two: Word Matters - Interpreting for State Leaders by Prof. Charles Qin (Catch up Online)
- IAC Culture Talks Series 3 Lecture One: The Transformative Vision of Exophony by Dr Isabelle Li (Catch up Online)
- IAC Culture Talks Series 2 Lecture Five: After the Dream: Tracking the Post-Study Lives of Chinese Women Graduates of Australian Universities by Professor Fran Martin (Catch up Online)
- IAC Culture Talks Series 2 Lecture Four: A Serious Look at Chinese Humour by Professor Jocelyn Chey (Catch up online)
- IAC Culture Talks Series 2 Lecture Three: 1000 Years of Chinese Food: What to Do with All These Recipes? by Professor Thomas David DuBois (Catch up online)
- IAC Culture Talks Series 2 Lecture Two: The Civilisation of China’s Southlands by Professor Anne McLaren (Catch up Online)
- IAC Culture Talks Series 2 Lecture One: In Search of Australian Literature by Prof Nicholas Jose (Catch up Online)
- IAC Culture Talks 3: ‘Innocent Young Girls’: The search for female provincial leaders in China by Dr Minglu Chen (Catch up Online)
- IAC Culture Talks Lecture 2: Transnational Divorce: Understanding Intimacies and Inequalities from Singapore by Dr Quah Ee Ling (Catch up Online)
- IAC Culture Talks: Inaugural Lecture by Professor Wanning Sun (Catch up Online)
-
- My China Story: Dr Geoff Raby AO (Catch up online)
- My China Story: David Walker AM (Catch up online)
- My China Story: David Goodman (Catch up online)
- My China Story: Jocelyn Chey AM (Catch up Online)
- My China Story: Stephen FitzGerald AO (Catch up Online)
- My China Story: Kevin Hobgood-Brown AM (Catch up Online)
- My China Story: Richard McGregor (Catch up Online)
- My China Story: Tracey Holmes (Catch up Online)
- My China Story: Linda Jaivin (Catch up Online)
-
- ACTS 10 & FASIC 9 Conferences
- In Conversation: The Role of Art: The Pokies / Tiger Machine (Catch up Online)
- Special Exhibition Talk-Cutting a Fine Figure: Chinese in the Australian Cultural Landscape by Dr Pamela See (Catch up Online)
- Trailblazers in China: A Conversation with Stephen FitzGerald AO, Yvonne Preston & Warren Duncan (Catch up Online)
- Portraits of Women as Creative Writers – In Conversation with Amani Haydar, Shirley Le and Winnie Dunn
- IAC Annual Address
- IAC Events and Public Seminars
- IAC Music Events and Talks
- If You Are the One Forum at WSU Featuring Q&A with Host Meng Fei
Search query Search
- IAC Home
- IAC Culture Talks
- IAC Culture Talks Series 2 Lecture Two: The Civilisation of China’s Southlands by Professor Anne McLaren (Catch up Online)
IAC Culture Talks Series 2 Lecture Two: The Civilisation of China’s Southlands by Professor Anne McLaren (Catch up Online)
This event was held on Thursday 17 April 2024
Abstract
The country that we call “China” is built on the foundation of a vast empire close to the size of Europe that spans radically different climatic and environmental zones. Populations in these different zones developed distinctive languages, customs, cuisines, and ethnic identities. Over the millennia, these different ethnic zones largely retained their own unique identities. Archaeological discoveries in the late twentieth century have demonstrated that the development of China was not unidirectional as once thought but multiregional. There were significant civilisations to the south and west of the Chinese heartland that developed earlier than the first known dynastic states based near the Yellow River.
The focus of this talk is on the culture of China’s southern civilisation. One of the most significant divisions in Chinese space is the massive Yangzi River, which rises in the uplands of Sichuan and flows towards the eastern coast. To the north one finds the sites of the earliest known dynasties, the so-called “cradle” of Chinese civilisation, based around dryland agriculture. South of the Yangzi River lies a well-watered region of uplands, rivers, and rice cultivation. According to the classical tradition, sedentary agriculture was brought to the “barbaric” southlands by historic figures from the civilised north. However, recent archaeological work has established that the region south of the Yangzi has zones of sedentary culture and permanent settlement at least as ancient as those found in the north. In the late twentieth century, ethnologists investigating ritual practices came across a belief in a feminised rice spirit, as commonly found elsewhere in monsoonal Asia. This is a new discovery as this belief system was previously held to be unknown in China. It also pointed to strong commonalities between the southlands of China and rice-growing communities of Southeast Asia.
In my own research I have investigated the implications of recent discoveries for our understanding of the long narrative songs (or folk epics) sung by rice cultivators in the paddy fields of the Lower Yangzi Lake Tai region. These songs and folk epics transmit cultural memories of an indigenous southern source for rice growing, a faith system based around a feminised rice spirit who embodied the transplanted bride, and a belief in the power of song to ensure fertility in the rice fields. The “ritual technology” of rice cultivation underpinned the agricultural strength of the Lower Yangzi delta, which for over a thousand years has been the most prosperous in China. The songs and folk epics remain today as part of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of this region and a reminder of the multiethnic nature of the former Chinese empire.
About the Speaker
Anne McLaren has also published another volume on Chinese regional culture, Performing Grief: Bridal Laments in Rural China (University of Hawaii Press, 2008). This book is a pioneering work on the oral and ritual culture of Chinese women. Another work deals with Chinese performance culture in the Ming dynasty (Chinese Popular Culture and Ming Chantefables Brill, 1998). She has also published two volumes on the status of women in China: Chinese Women Living and Working (Edited: Routledge, 2004) and Dress, Sex and Text in Chinese Culture (Monash Asia Institute, co-edited with Antonia Finnane, 1999). Her recent memoir, Slow Train to Democracy: Memoirs of Life in Shanghai, 1978 to 1979 (Australian Scholarly Publishing, 2020) offers insight into China’s democracy movement at the start of the reform era.
About Us
The Chey Fellowship
Upcoming Events
Exhibitions
IAC Art Talks
IAC Culture Talks
- IAC Culture Talks Series 3 Lecture Two: Word Matters - Interpreting for State Leaders by Prof. Charles Qin (Catch up Online)
- IAC Culture Talks Series 3 Lecture One: The Transformative Vision of Exophony by Dr Isabelle Li (Catch up Online)
- IAC Culture Talks Series 2 Lecture Five: After the Dream: Tracking the Post-Study Lives of Chinese Women Graduates of Australian Universities by Professor Fran Martin (Catch up Online)
- IAC Culture Talks Series 2 Lecture Four: A Serious Look at Chinese Humour by Professor Jocelyn Chey (Catch up online)
- IAC Culture Talks Series 2 Lecture Three: 1000 Years of Chinese Food: What to Do with All These Recipes? by Professor Thomas David DuBois (Catch up online)
- IAC Culture Talks Series 2 Lecture Two: The Civilisation of China’s Southlands by Professor Anne McLaren (Catch up Online)
- IAC Culture Talks Series 2 Lecture One: In Search of Australian Literature by Prof Nicholas Jose (Catch up Online)
- IAC Culture Talks 3: ‘Innocent Young Girls’: The search for female provincial leaders in China by Dr Minglu Chen (Catch up Online)
- IAC Culture Talks Lecture 2: Transnational Divorce: Understanding Intimacies and Inequalities from Singapore by Dr Quah Ee Ling (Catch up Online)
- IAC Culture Talks: Inaugural Lecture by Professor Wanning Sun (Catch up Online)
Writers in Conversation
IAC Artist’s Story
My China Story
Australian Literature Translation
HDR Students
Chinese Australian History
IAC Events
Contact Us
About Us
Highlights
Contact Us
- Contact Us
- Emergency Help
- Right to information
- Disclaimer
- Privacy
- Complaints Unit
- Accessibility
- Website Feedback
©2025 Copyright Western Sydney University - ABN 53 014 069 881 | CRICOS Provider No: 00917k