
The Mongol Century: Visual Cultures of Yuan China, 1271-1368
Shane McCausland
The Mongol Century explores the visual world of China’s Yuan dynasty (1271–1368), the spectacular but relatively short-lived regime founded by Khubilai Khan, regarded as the pre-eminent khanate of the Mongol empire.
Although in recent years exhibitions have begun to open up the inherent paradoxes of Yuan culture, this is the first book in English to adopt a fully comprehensive approach. It incorporates a broad range of visual media of the East Asia region to reconsider the impact Mongol culture had in China, from urban architecture and design to tomb murals and porcelain, and from calligraphy and printed paper money to stone sculpture. Fresh and invigorating, The Mongol Century explores, in fascinating detail, the visual culture of this brief but captivating era of East Asian history.
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About Shane McCausland
Reviews for The Mongol Century: Visual Cultures of Yuan China, 1271-1368
Foreign Language Translated Book category
The British art historian Shane McCausland, in the handsomely produced The Mongol Century: Visual Cultures of Yuan China, 1271–1368, is concerned above all with tracing the Mongol influence through surviving artifacts. It is a complex and speculative task. The Mongols’ organizational skills and patronage are easier to identify than what they themselves created. And their impact, at first, was disruptive. The entrenched Chinese bureaucracy was drastically diluted. The rigorous exam system, which created a scholar class in government, abruptly ended. Mongols became the administrative elite. Ultimately, a greater diversity of education, languages, faiths, and ethnicities enriched the brief century of their rule, while the enormous reach of the Mongol domains vitalized a commerce in culture as well as goods . . . He identifies Mongol influence or patronage not only in painting and porcelain, but in an arrestingly wide range of other arts: relief sculpture, calligraphy, tomb murals, woodblock-printed books. The richly varied illustrations include those of printed paper money, gold saddle decorations, and even the official passes carried by yam postal riders, inscribed with death threats against anyone disrupting them . . . [A] careful study
New York Review of Books
Through an interweaving of architecture, tomb robbing, painting, natural disasters, examinations, ceramic invention and a revealing use of encyclopaedic printed works, McCausland reveals the complex culture of the Yuan dynasty . . . McCausland has a gift for finding illuminating and unusual objects to illustrate his argument
Burlington Magazine
a richly textured portrait in codex of the easternmost part of this world . . . superbly illustrated not only for the number and quality of the images but also for the inclusion of rarely-seen joys . . . The ceramic enthusiast will be rewarded for paging through this superb book . . .The integrated approach to Yuan culture, across media and disciplinary boundaries, is this works greatest contribution, making it an exploration in fascinating detail and inspiring breadth of the complex and layered realities of Yuan society.
George Manginis, Oriental Ceramic Society Newsletter
Richly illustrated, The Mongol Century synthesizes twenty years of transformative research on the art of the Mongol-Yuan dynasty that has articulated its cultural pluralism. Showcasing many new perspectives on the visual and material cultures of this polity, The Mongol Century reinforces the message of seminal work undertaken by many scholars in ground-breaking journal articles, doctoral dissertations, and major museum exhibitions and their accompanying catalogs.
Journal of Song-Yuan Studies
This book takes on one of the most fascinating of Chinas dynasties, the Mongol Yuan, presenting an overarching study of its cultural complexity, illuminated by the visual arts. McCausland uses the capitals cityscape, paintings and objects as entries into seven larger themes that range from the nature of the Mongol urbanism to the global branding of the Mongols through the widespread export of blue-and-white porcelain. McCausland is a nimble writer and he has crafted a much more granular and balanced view of this accomplished and flawed dynasty than anything so far published in English . . . a must-read.
Patricia Berger, Professor of Chinese Art, UC Berkeley
One of the first reliable social histories of Yuan dynasty art and a useful contribution to Chinese art history.
Morris Rossabi, Adjunct Professor of Chinese and Inner Asian History, Columbia University
This is an important contribution to the study of the Mongol-Yuan period in China. Using a wide variety of sources, Shane McCausland has not only written a general study of Yuan-dynasty visual and material culture he has also created a fine introduction to the Mongol period in China. He makes clear the poly-ethnic nature of Yuan society and redresses the view that the Mongols had little impact on Chinese civilization . . . McCausland has achieved his aim of drawing out the distinctiveness of Yuan culture. The Mongol Century is a fascinating entrée into what it meant to live in Yuan-period China.
David Ake Sensabaugh, Ruth and Bruce Dayton Curator of Asian Art, Yale University Art Gallery