Research Catalog

The contest of the fruits

Title
The contest of the fruits / eds. Guangtian Ha & Slavs and Tatars.
Publication
  • Haverford, Pennsylvania : Haverford College, [2021]
  • Cambridge, Massachusetts ; London, England : MIT Press
  • ©2021

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StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextUse in library PL54.67 .C66 2021gOff-site

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Details

Additional Authors
  • Ha, Guangtian
  • Slavs and Tatars (Group of artists), editor.
Description
157 pages : illustrations (some color); 26 cm
Summary
  • The Contest of the Fruits takes a nineteenth-century Uyghur satirical poem as a departure point for investigations of language, politics, religion, humor, resilience, and resistance in a pluralistic world. Composed at the crossroads of multiple civilizations and empires and born of the Uyghurs\u0027 liminal position at the edges of Islam and the frontiers of China, "The Contest of the Fruits" captures a world in which borders are gateways rather than dividing lines. The poem, highly performative, embellished with verbal flourishes, and featuring the ribald rivalry of such fruits as mulberry, pomegranate, quince, and pear, may be the first Turkic rap battle.
  • The book, which accompanies a project by the art collective Slavs and Tatars, brings together artists, academics, poets, and performers to create a visually compelling volume that deploys different registers (high and low) to examine subjects often considered mutually exclusive (for example, religion and hip-hop). It offers essays by leading scholars and journalists that cover topics ranging from language politics to the prominence of Uyghur rappers in China. Shorter "pop-out" texts take a more tentacular approach to Uyghur culture, sampling poetry by diaspora Uyghur poets and discussing such subjects as calligraphy, Uyghur pop music, mäshräp, and the Sufi practice of Samāc.
Subject
  • Uighur (Turkic people) > Civilization > 21st century
  • Uighur poetry > Translations into English
  • Cultural relations > Poetry
  • Cultural relations
  • Uighur poetry
Genre/Form
  • Poetry.
  • Translations.
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references (pages 147-151).
Language (note)
  • Text in English and Uighur, translated from the Uighur.
ISBN
  • 026254251X
  • 9780262542517
LCCN
99989565567
OCLC
  • on1227030535
  • 1227030535
Owning Institutions
Columbia University Libraries