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Writing and Materiality in Ancient China

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This book is an interdisciplinary study of the varied forms of writing found at the Mawangdui tomb site in south-central China, exploring the different roles that texts played in the lives and afte...
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  • 23 December 2025
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Excavations at the famous Mawangdui tomb site in south-central China (early to mid-second century BCE) have unearthed many kinds of writing, including documents made of silk, wood, and bamboo as well as a wide range of inscribed artifacts. This book is an interdisciplinary study of these varied forms of writing, exploring the different roles that texts played in the lives and afterlives of Chinese elites during the Han dynasty.

Examining documents and artifacts from the Mawangdui tombs in comparative perspective, Luke Waring demonstrates that early Chinese writing should be understood as part of the material and visual cultures of its time. Written texts were used to do more than simply preserve and transmit important information: they were also work tasks, storage items, performance aids, apotropaic talismans, aesthetically pleasing patterns, display pieces, possessions, and burial objects. Writing was even integrated into older, perhaps more powerful modes of cultural expression such as ritual performance and material display. Waring argues that manuscripts and inscribed objects were always things, artifacts that had powerful effects on the world that created them. Comprehensively researched and lavishly illustrated, Writing and Materiality in Ancient China offers a new understanding of the textual cultures of the early Western Han.

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Price: $65.00
Pages: 360
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Series: Tang Center Series in Early China
Publication Date: 23 December 2025
Trim Size: 9.25 X 6.12 in
ISBN: 9780231219563
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

HISTORY / Asia / China, HISTORY / Ancient / General, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Archaeology

Fifty years ago, the discoveries of a perfectly preserved corpse in one tomb at Mawangdui and a substantial library in another tomb there astounded the scholarly world, giving rise to thousands of technical studies over the following decades. Now, Luke Waring’s Writing and Materiality in Ancient China provides a comprehensive overview of the tombs, of the lives and deaths of the people buried in them, and especially of the numerous kinds of writings buried with them. Probing in its detail, yet always attentive to broader questions of how to understand ancient culture, this is a model of what scholarship should be.
Luke Waring is an assistant professor of Asian studies at the University of Texas at Austin.

Acknowledgments
Conventions
Dynasties and Western Han Rulers
Introduction
1. The Li Family Tombs
2. Producing Texts
3. Curating Texts
4. Performing Texts
5. Visualizing Texts
6. Burying Texts
Conclusion
Appendix
Notes
Bibliography
Index