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    xi'an

    Explore " xi'an" with insightful episodes like "Sounding Stone and Cetacean Energy", "The Keymaker: 2/2 (Time Travel Drama) - Story #4", "The Keymaker: 1/2 (Time Travel Drama) - Story #4", "Episode 24 — China with Jesse David Fox" and "010 Reise in China Teil II & Auf der Mauer in Xi’An" from podcasts like ""Sounding History", "Stories from the Hearth", "Stories from the Hearth", "TAKE ME THERE!" and "Umlauts Are Overestimated"" and more!

    Episodes (5)

    Sounding Stone and Cetacean Energy

    Sounding Stone and Cetacean Energy

    This episode is about what happens when sounds and people meet and mix. A lot of what we talk about takes place away from North America and Europe, but we end up circling back to a primary question in this season of the podcast: how did Westerners use the sounds of others to perceive the world, “The West,” and themselves?

    Our first example is one of those historical stories that is so, well, weird you have to wonder if it is actually fiction. In the early years of the seventeenth century Chinese officials discovered a thousand year-old stone pillar (or “steele”) near the city of Xi’an in Western China, along the old east-west trade route known as “the Silk Road.” It was inscribed both in Chinese and Syriac, a form of Aramiac in which many early Christian texts are transmitted. Recently arrived Jesuit missionaries were quick to pick up on this find, because it supported their claim that Christianity had a long history in China. They also transmitted the news back to Rome. 

    Then the fun starts. The great Jesuit scholar Athanasius Kircher, famous among other things for his collection of interesting objects and texts from around the world, used what he read about the stone to speculate about the intonation of the Chinese language (and China’s relationship to ancient Egypt!). A few decades later a minor German clergyman in then very provincial Berlin read Kircher’s account and proposed the idea that in China people sang all the time (as if they were in an opera) instead of speaking. Our point is that conclusions about far-away places don’t have to be true to be interesting.

    Our second postcard was inspired by a TikTok meme. At the time we recorded the show, sea shanties were everywhere on the internet, thanks mainly to the music-video sharing app ability to amplify strange (we would say interesting!) sound objects: the app can act as a kind of digital version of Kircher’s collection of curiosities. This got us thinking about where sea shanties, and other seafaring songs come from.

    And so we found ourselves talking about whaling ships. As Chris points out, whalers, which were really floating factories, were a kind of Silk Road on the water, thanks to their global routes and diverse crews. They also remind us that music history, economic history, exploration, and extraction often run along the same tracks. The sea shanty meme was good fun (for most listeners!). But sea shanties, and other songs from the riches of maritime history, are more than just curiosities. They offer vital sonic clues about big processes, fascinating moments, and human experience in global history.

    Key Takeaways

    • Historical misunderstandings can be interesting in their own right: take the story of how the discovery of an ancient monument in China led one European to speculate that Chinese people sang all the time as if they were in an opera. Behind this odd idea is a story of someone struggling to make sense of new historical evidence.
    • Whaling ships and other workhorses of the maritime trade were both “floating factories” and fascinating soundscapes. The music passed down from them (including the recent TikTok sea shanty craze) offer clues about these soundscapes, and the ways that music history and the histories of economics (especially the history of working people) travel on the same tracks.

    Resources

    All of the books mentioned in the episode can be found in our Sounding History Goodreads discussion group. Join the conversation!

    The Keymaker: 2/2 (Time Travel Drama) - Story #4

    The Keymaker: 2/2 (Time Travel Drama) - Story #4

    Xi'an, China. 1967. A Kazakhstani writer has travelled through time to the heart of Communist China's barbaric Cultural Revolution. Now, he awaits trial, charged with crimes for which the penalty is death. The protagonist of his latest story, a girl called Junlei, finds herself trapped in a mysterious library. Solving the riddle of this library might just be the only means of escape, for both she and her author. But whilst both characters are held against their will, how could either of them ever escape this historic hell? 

    This is the dramatic conclusion to two-part historical thriller, The Keymaker.

    CW: public humiliation and torture, violence

    Stories from the Hearth is an experimental storytelling experience ft. truly original fiction and thoughtfully produced soundscapes. The aim of this podcast is to rekindle its listeners' love for the ancient art of storytelling (and story-listening), and to bring some small escapism to the frantic energies of the modern world. Stories from the Hearth is the brainchild of queer punk poet, environmentalist, and anarchist Cal Bannerman. Vive l'art!

    Episode #6 out Sunday 11th April 2021 (11.04.21)

    Support the podcast and get early access, bonus content, exclusive extra episodes, an in-episode shout-out, and the chance to become part of a wider community, by visiting our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/storiesfromthehearthpodcast

    Instagram: @storiesfromthehearth
    Twitter: @Hearth_Podcast
    YouTube: Stories from the Hearth
    Email: storiesfromthehearthpodcast@gmail.com

    Original Artwork by Anna Ferrara
    Anna's Instagram: @giallosardina
    Anna's Portfolio: https://annaferrara.carbonmade.com/

    Thank you for listening. Please consider following, subscribing to, and sharing this episode, and please do tell your friends all about Stories from the Hearth.

    The Keymaker: 1/2 (Time Travel Drama) - Story #4

    The Keymaker: 1/2 (Time Travel Drama) - Story #4

    Xi'an, China. 2045. A Kazakhstani writer sits down at his desk and begins to type. Beneath his fingers, the story of a young girl unfolds: she holds a mysterious key, inherited from her grandfather. As the key turns, and the world changes, the lives of the writer and his character must intersect, or fade from memory forever. This is part one of a two-part story.

    Stories from the Hearth is an experimental storytelling experience ft. truly original fiction and thoughtfully produced soundscapes. The aim of this podcast is to rekindle its listeners' love for the ancient art of storytelling (and story-listening), and to bring some small escapism to the frantic energies of the modern world. Stories from the Hearth is the brainchild of queer punk poet, environmentalist, and anarchist Cal Bannerman. Vive l'art!

    Episode #5 (The Keymaker: Part Two) out Sunday 21st March 2021 (21.03.21)

    Support the podcast and get early access, bonus content, exclusive extra episodes, an in-episode  shout-out, and the chance to become part of a wider community, by visiting our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/storiesfromthehearthpodcast

    Instagram: @storiesfromthehearth
    Twitter: @Hearth_Podcast
    YouTube: Stories from the Hearth
    Email: storiesfromthehearthpodcast@gmail.com

    Original Artwork by Anna Ferrara
    Anna's Instagram: @giallosardina
    Anna's Portfolio: https://annaferrara.carbonmade.com/

    Thank you for listening. Please consider following, subscribing to, and sharing this episode, and please do tell your friends all about Stories from the Hearth.

    "ambience marche 3" was originally recorded by schafferdavid and is courtesy of freesound.org, it is licensed under a CC BY 3.0 International License. Click here to read more about the license.

    Episode 24 — China with Jesse David Fox

    Episode 24 — China with Jesse David Fox

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    010 Reise in China Teil II & Auf der Mauer in Xi’An

    010 Reise in China Teil II & Auf der Mauer in Xi’An
    Mit 45 Seiten und zwei komplett abgeschlossenen Gechichten ist der Companion zur Folge 10 schon fast ein echtes Buch. Im ersten Teil der Folge geht es nocheinmal um Tee bzw. den letzten Tag der First-Flush-Ernte. Und dann um ein paar Reisetips zu Shanghai, Xiamen, Lijiang und Hainan, die sich eventuell von dem, was man in diversen Reiseberichten findet, ein wenig abweicht ... oder auch nicht... Diese Reisetips in den Folgen werden immer mal wieder fortgesetzt, denn es gibt ja noch so einige Gegenden in Asien, die es unbedingt wert sind, von mir besprochen zu werden. Im zweiten Teil, dem OKM-Teil mache ich einen Rundgang um die Altstadt Xi’Ans auf der nun mittlerweile vollstaendig rekonstruierten Stadtmauer. Es ist etwas windig, ziemich kalt und vor allem sehr schlechte Luft. Aber seht euch die Bilder im Companion selber an. Den beigelegten Podcast-Companion im ePub-Format gibt es hier.
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