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The Allure of the Mirror

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In Han China, few luxury objects were as widely coveted as bronze mirrors. Yanlong Guo explores how and why these objects became so beloved throughout early imperial China, uncovering the varied wa...
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  • 23 September 2025
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In Han China (202 BCE–220 CE), few luxury objects were as widely coveted as bronze mirrors. Typically circular and ranging from seven to thirty centimeters in diameter, these mirrors were crafted from high-tin bronze, with highly reflective surfaces on the front and intricate designs and auspicious inscriptions on the reverse.

The Allure of the Mirror explores how and why these objects, historically known as haowu (“fine things”), became so beloved throughout early imperial China. Tracing their production and consumption—from manufacture in imperial, princely, and private workshops to their roles in life and death—Yanlong Guo uncovers the varied ways these seemingly trivial objects took on social and cultural significance. Across social classes, mirrors had a wide range of uses as status symbols, personal tools, romantic tokens, family heirlooms, auspicious amulets, treasured gifts, and funeral offerings. Guo demonstrates how these “fine things,” once exclusive to elites, gradually became accessible to a wider segment of society. Mirrors, he argues, connected people across the empire, fostering a shared cultural community of aesthetic tastes and social values from royal courts to rural households.

Interdisciplinary and comprehensive, The Allure of the Mirror offers fresh insights into the relationship among art, society, and ideology in the Han Empire, revealing how decorative objects could bridge social divides and shape cultural identity.

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Price: $65.00
Pages: 376
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Series: Tang Center Series in Early China
Publication Date: 23 September 2025
Trim Size: 9.25 X 6.12 in
ISBN: 9780231217781
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: HISTORY / Asia / China, HISTORY / Ancient / General, ART / Asian / Chinese
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From mine to marketplace to tomb, early Chinese bronze mirrors let us glimpse the aesthetic, economic, sociological, religious, and even philosophical discourses of their users; surviving by the thousands, they collectively form a robust database for exploring material and cultural values from two millennia ago. Yanlong Guo marshals hundreds of archeological reports, primary sources, and secondary studies to adeptly contextualize the early bronze mirror and here gives us its most thorough treatment to date. It will endure just as the mirror has.
Yanlong Guo is assistant professor of art history at Smith College.

Introduction
1. Making Mirrors
2. Distributing Mirrors
3. Handling Intimate Mirrors
4. Seeing in Bright Mirrors
5. Inscribing Auspicious Mirrors
6. Gifting Precious Mirrors
7. Burying Familiar Mirrors
Coda
Appendix: Typology and Chronology of Han Mirrors
Notes
Bibliography
Index