This volume offers a broad and interdisciplinary exploration of the aesthetic dimensions and expressive richness of Chinese writing, spanning from the first attestations of sign-making to modern attempts of integrating innovative art forms.
Moving beyond the conventional aesthetic categories of shufa, commonly translated as "Chinese calligraphy", it proposes a novel approach for understanding the aesthetics of Sino-writing, an inclusive term for writing systems that have adopted and adapted Chinese characters. This approach reconsiders aesthetics as a process grounded in bodily experiences and shaped by cultural context.