posted on 2021-06-23, 11:23authored byDavid L. Rolston
<p>What was the most influential
mass medium in China before the internet? <i>Jingju </i>(Peking
opera)! Although its actors were commonly thought to have been illiterate,
written and other inscripted versions of plays became more and more important
and varied.</p>
<p>This book shows how increasing textualization and the resulting
fixation of a performance tradition that once privileged improvisation changed
the genre. It traces, from <i>Jingju</i>’s birth in the 19th century to
the present, how texts were used for the production and consumption of this
important performance genre and the changes in the concepts of authorship,
copyright, and performance rights that took place during the process. The
state’s desire to police what was performed is shown to have been a major factor
in these changes.</p>
<p>The scope and coverage of the book is already unprecedented, but
it is also supplemented by an additional chapter (on where the plays were
performed, who performed them, and who went to see them) available for download
online.</p>