December 23, 2008

recent cultural activities


We periodically join Dan's students when they have cultural activities. Some of the things we've done in the last month included hearing a demonstration of guzheng music by one of CUN's students in the music department. She shared a little about the history of the guzheng as well as different styles that have evolved over the centuries. Interestingly, the pitch to which the strings are tuned, being easily changed by moving the bridge of each string, has changed over time - modern songs use a different scale altogether. Here is a link to a free, downloadable guzheng song (track 5 of the ones listed) as blogger doesn't have an easy way to upload music into a blog post.

We also learned how to carve stone seals. After sanding a piece of soapstone so it was level, we then used a maobi, or brush pen, and ink, to draw a reverse image of what we wanted our stamp to look like. Then we used a chisel to carve away the empty space around our designs.

December 22, 2008

south does not equal warmer

Ok, the title is a lie, Hangzhou IS warmer than Beijing, but there is a caveat.

When we left for the airport at five yesterday morning there was a small layer of snow alongside the road outside the city, and Devin happened to see a temperature reading of 10 degrees F (-12 C). Arriving in Hangzhou, it was a balmy 42F and we all felt it was great, unzipping our jackets and feeling quite comfortable.

What makes the south feel so cold though is that we're below the dividing line between heated and unheated houses. The Yangtze River (Chang Jiang) is the line that divides northern and southern China and in southern China houses don't come equipped with heat. People just take it for granted here, and there's some subtle pressure to just get used to it and wear more clothes rather than turn on the heater. In spite of the fact that today's temperature is hovering around freezing (lower if you consider windchill), and the windows leak, I'm reluctant to turn on the AC/heater unit in the living room. No one in the family uses one - typically we just wear a half dozen layers, tolerate cold hands, drink hot tea and generally look like overstuffed dolls, but when we're left to our own this evening I'll probably turn it on.

When we lived here, in 2002, the interior of the house received no sunlight because we were on the first floor, overshadowed by another building to our south. We spent time outside every sunny day before going back into the cold house.

We'd all gotten used to the heated house in Beijing, and the warm sunlight that pours through our south balcony. I'm going to have to prod myself to get things done - the cold makes me want to just sit under a blanket all day.

****

I was surprised that exactly six months had passed since we were last here. We flew from CA on summer solstice and returned to Hangzhou on winter solstice. In the last six months I realize I've gotten used to life in Beijing (not just the heater... ok, yes, the heater!). Moving around, travelling, is not something I like all that much. Trying to settle in somewhere new is actually unsettling - our usual things that we do that make it feel like we have a home are missing, our usual life is mixed up and honestly I think I've forgotten Hangzhou dialect completely and I keep getting mixed up in communication. I recall that we felt like this in Beijing when we first arrived, comparing it to Hangzhou, findng it lacking, but here we are doing it again, reversed.

I'm an average, typical person, in spite of what it looks like with all this travel and living abroad. I like to have my regular life, some continuity, a predictable home that's set up the way I've chosen, making my own decisions about how things are ordered. Maybe it sounds like complaint, but I think it's just that I know what makes me happiest.

****

On the flip side, Dan's family is great. I've always gotten along really well with them. I have a strangely privileged position, being a foreigner (and a kind of useless one at that) - I can't really cook the way everyone else can (and cooking under pressure, for a group of 12 is not my forte) so I'm not expected to make big dinners for everyone to come over and enjoy. Plus my inadequate Chinese makes it so that not much is really expected of me (it would be pointless to have me try to go pay Dan's parent's phone bill or take them to a doctor's appointment or do the grocery shopping or other such errand - all things I could easily accomplish in the US).

I'll be posting some pics from the last few weeks as soon as my fingers thaw a little. :-)

December 19, 2008

heading south for the winter

We're taking off on Sunday to go visit Dan's family in Hangzhou (back where we started in June). We'll be there until after Chinese New Year (or Spring Festival, as it's called) which is happening in early February. Dan will head out of town for some lectures and then be in Beijing for part of the time, then join us later for the holiday.

So, in the midst of packing and getting the house ready to "close down" while we're gone, I may not post again until we get settled in Hangzhou.

December 16, 2008

some things we've learned


The trees do eventually lose their leaves, but not until late November. The only time you can find a good pile to go crunching through is in the early morning before they've been swept up and stuffed into plastic trash bags. Poplar leaves are good and crunchy.



In the winter the bushes wear coats. This is true not only on campus, but along the big boulevards, too.




Pizza can be successfully made in a toaster oven with regular bread dough and imported spaghetti sauce and Land O'Lakes cheese (they're in the international foods section of the big grocery store).


Oh, and a picture I'd saved from last summer, so you can compare a burning California with every day Asia (see the earlier post for the satellite pic of Beijing, and see here for an article on the Brown Cloud that Hangs Over Asia, as we've started calling it, in capital letters because that must be its proper name).

December 15, 2008

Nashville, Tennessee






Some pictures from Nashville, where I stayed for almost a week.

December 14, 2008

Victoria, British Columbia

My first conference in November was on Victoria Island, British Columbia, Canada. These are pictures I took while walking around near the University of Victoria.








I'll also post some photos from Nashville, Tennessee, and I took a lot of landscape photos when I was with my students in Qinghai in mid October.

December 12, 2008

the benefits of smog

It makes for a pretty sunrise.






but I guess the benefit is outweighed by this (as seen from above).


December 09, 2008

new art exhibit

Our art tutor, Shawn, is having his work exhibited in Dan's program gallery. His paintings are colorful and when you walk in to the hallway it's really quite arresting. He has some of his older stuff (from when he was in high school) up on display too- these are the very impressionistic gouache landscapes. The oil paintings are ones that he did during his undergrad years. Now he's a graduate student, though I haven't really figured out what his program is. He's in the art department and about the closest I could get was something like physiology - basically he studies body structure, but in relation to art, not health sciences. He's spent the last few weeks in his studio with a lot of bones, learning how to draw their structure and then applying that to his paintings of people.

This is him, on the left, with Dan and several of the program's students and tutors, at the opening ceremony for the exhibit, which was Shawn's first.