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The Chinese Zodiac in Cultures and Traditions

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The Chinese Zodiac in Cultures and Traditions

By: Cindy I-Fen Cheng, The Great Courses
Narrated by: Cindy I-Fen Cheng
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About this listen

Lunar New Year, or the first new moon of the lunar calendar, is celebrated by people around the world and across different cultures. Within Chinese culture, the ushering in of a new year is celebrated through one of 12 distinct zodiac animals, each of which is known for its power to map a person’s behavior, character, and fate.

In The Chinese Zodiac in Cultures and Traditions, you’ll gain insights into how cultures make sense of the passing of time and our relationship to it. Your guide is Cindy I-Fen Cheng, the Robinson Edwards professor of history and Asian American studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. In six illuminating lectures, she takes you on an immersive journey into the cultural importance and traditions of the Rat, the Ox, the Tiger, the Rabbit, the Dragon, the Snake, the Horse, the Goat, the Monkey, the Rooster, the Dog, and the Pig.

Along the way, you’ll learn how the Chinese zodiac is itself a synthesis of many different schools of thought and thinking and how its development serves as an ever-changing guide to Chinese culture and its social mores and values. You’ll also get a greater sense of how the legacy of the Chinese zodiac has been incorporated and reimagined in other countries—convergences that speak to the beauty of cultures coming together and changing over time.

Whatever your Chinese zodiac sign may be, there’s much to discover in this Audible Original.

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Americas Asia China Social Sciences United States
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As this being the first time I have ever learnt about anything about zodiacs, I must say that this was very interesting and informative. The narration was lovely and a brilliant retelling of the great race. I would recommend to anyone! thank you very much 👍

A brilliant retelling of the great race

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Cute tales overview.
Nice pleasant voice.
It’s more mythological and storytelling than strictly educational or logical.
Great for imagery understanding of the Chinese Signs’ features. Highly recommend for beginners and those who’d like to understand the roots of the Chinese astrology symbols.

Brief and nice introduction to Chinese Zodiac Mythology

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I thought this was going to be a series of lectures by a historian. This being a 'Great Course"+ the title 'cultures and tradition' addition, you know?

Instead, it was a series of tales for children (think a variant of the 'the hare & the turtle race') told in an incredibly simplistic way ('and then the monkey said to the tiger'). Nothing about how the Chinese zodiac came to be, about historical Chinese astrologists, about how impactful this cultural belief may be on modern day Chinese (for instance a leader like Xi) or how it fared under Mao, under different rulers... How it changed -or didn't.

It's literally a few incredibly moralistic stories that treat all this as if it is actually true. It gives astrological advice on romantic partners for goodness sake. Where is the context, the actual history, anthropology, the smidgen of social studies? There is a mere 5 minutes devoted on how other countries treat it, but it's nothing more than 'in Thailand it's the same, but the rabbit is actually fierce there instead of meek', or something like that.

Why is this a great course??? It's an airport paperback for people who actually believe this stuff at best. But for those people, it would be way too shallow. So what is this for?

The shorter great courses have almost all been a dissapointment, and the more recent they are, the worse they get.

Storytelling for children

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Loved the stories, but then she started calling Bazi a pseudoscience, which is kind of weird being a couple of thousand years old empiric science, but I could get over that. What I couldn't was that the approach was very shallow based solely on cultural/popular aspect and not hihglighted as such. As a Bazi practioner I could be biased, but not everyone has my background and listeners could accept this approach as truth, but it is very misleading on several accounts.

Great stories but misleading info on bazi

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