Rachel McVeigh 魏瑞秀
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remcveigh.bsky.social
Rachel McVeigh 魏瑞秀
@remcveigh.bsky.social
500 followers 470 following 160 posts
Medieval Chinese poetry and poetics: genre, form, animals | currently working on cranes, sometimes filmic dogs | PhD student at Harvard | formerly Oxford/PKU | she/her
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Reposted by Rachel McVeigh 魏瑞秀
Reposted by Rachel McVeigh 魏瑞秀
Reposted by Rachel McVeigh 魏瑞秀
‘According to the philosophical account Taylor draws on, the articulations of poetry are as fully capable of disclosing the existential significance of human life as the words of philosophers or saints.’

Stephen Mulhall on Charles Taylor’s ‘Cosmic Connections’: www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v4...
Stephen Mulhall · Self-Interpreting Animals
New linguistic articulations can reconfigure the way we make sense of our own feelings, thoughts and responses – our...
www.lrb.co.uk
Reposted by Rachel McVeigh 魏瑞秀
In Jiangnan’s silk-rich valleys, silkworm cats (蚕猫) guard more than just cocoons. They protect a legacy.
Passed down through generations, these feline guardians keep rodents at bay, ensuring the safety of precious silkworm seeds. But their role isn’t just practical; 1/2
#caturday
Reposted by Rachel McVeigh 魏瑞秀
BREAKING: I've just learned that there are teeny-tiny chameleons called stumped-tailed chameleons and they look like this AND I CANNOT HANDLE IT
Reposted by Rachel McVeigh 魏瑞秀
Emperor Huizong of the Song (1082–1135) may have faltered as a ruler, but his artistry was unmatched. In his paintings, cats often stalk butterflies, a scene both tender and symbolic.
The word for cat (māo) echoes mào (耄), meaning old age, while butterfly (dié) sounds like dié (耋), 1/2
Reposted by Rachel McVeigh 魏瑞秀
Reposted by Rachel McVeigh 魏瑞秀
A “Music for 18 Musicians”-type piece, but made up of interlocking recordings of players in handshake lines saying “good game, good game, good game, good game…”
Reposted by Rachel McVeigh 魏瑞秀
In this piece on "genre borrowing" I study why netizens use Sima Qian's "arrayed biography" (列传) form to write biographies of Li Wenliang & how the narrative devices of this ancient genre align with the logic of digital culture. Open access! @asc.upenn.edu journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...
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Idk how Harvard Art Museums got hold of him bc I think he’s supposed to be my pet??
…..a tomb figurine in the form of an auspicious aquatic creature in the form of a human-headed fish? 🥹 I love him so much??
Reposted by Rachel McVeigh 魏瑞秀
publication day for my *Documents géographiques de Dunhuang*, a social and cultural history of geographical knowledge, and probably one of the only medieval history books published in France during the ephemeral Lecornu government, which you can freely download here: books.openedition.org/cdf/20307
Reposted by Rachel McVeigh 魏瑞秀
Reposted by Rachel McVeigh 魏瑞秀
Reposted by Rachel McVeigh 魏瑞秀
Our friend the Serra Do Araçatuba Flea Toad is another tiny from southern Brazil! They are less than half an inch long when fully grown! They are a member of a genus of toads known as Saddleback Toads, named after a saddle shaped bony patch covering their spine! (photo by Luiz F. Ribeiro)
Reposted by Rachel McVeigh 魏瑞秀
Imagine the Last Supper reimagined in a Ming Dynasty courtyard: Christ at the center, not in Jerusalem, but beneath carved wooden beams and fluttering lucky clouds.
In this early 20th-century painting, Peter wears a flowing blue hanfu, seated on a three-legged stool beside lotus blooms rising 1/2
Reposted by Rachel McVeigh 魏瑞秀
Happy to announce the launch of the Digital Library of #ChineseClassics! A comprehensive #collection of over 500 texts, being the result of 20 years of research and the work of 500 scholars.
Reposted by Rachel McVeigh 魏瑞秀
Reposted by Rachel McVeigh 魏瑞秀
CfP for an exciting animal panel at the upcoming Association of Art History Conference (University of Cambridge, 8-10 April 2026). A great opportunity for Chinese animal / art scholars! 🎨🐝🐸
Reposted by Rachel McVeigh 魏瑞秀
Dear friends,
As have become a habit, I mark each #autumnequinox by sharing a small poem by Xin Qiji. I also start my translation cycle of Chinese and Japanese poems and prose that mark the twenty-four lunisolar micro-seasons. Translation notes blogged here:
#everynightapoem
Reposted by Rachel McVeigh 魏瑞秀
imagine if a family of beavers randomly showed up right now and finished whatever thing you've been putting off
Reposted by Rachel McVeigh 魏瑞秀
Reposted by Rachel McVeigh 魏瑞秀
Writing history aficionados -- 注意! Detailed analyses of Tang brushes, paper & ink from Murong Zhi's tomb: doi:10.1038/s40494-025-01989.
Even if one doesn’t have to go along with the “deep Sinicization of the Tuyuhun royal family” bit in the discussion, a fascinating paper.