Rulan Chao Pian
{{Family name hatnote|Pian|lang=Chinese}}{{Short description|American musicologist}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=April 2024}}
{{Infobox scientist
| name = Rulan Chao Pian
{{nobold|卞趙如蘭}}
| image = Rulan Chao Pian at the age of 20.jpg
| image_size =
| alt =
| caption = Pian in 1942
| birth_date = {{birth date|1922|4|20}}
| birth_place = Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.
| death_date = {{death date and age|2013|11|30|1922|4|20}}
| death_place = Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.
| citizenship =
| nationality = American
| fields = Ethnomusicology, Asian studies
| workplaces = Harvard University
| known_for = Study of music in China, Chinese opera.
| spouse = {{marriage|Theodore Pian|1945|2009|end=d.}}
| children =
}}
Rulan Chao Pian{{efn|{{zh|s=卞赵如兰|t=卞趙如蘭|p=Biàn Zhào Rúlán}}}} (née Rulan Chao; April 20, 1922 {{ndash}} November 30, 2013),[https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/obituaries/2014/01/01/rulan-pian-scholar-chinese-music-and-chinese-language-teacher-harvard/tMj1O7nqzBiahlctPuQubI/story.html Rulan Pian, 91, scholar of Chinese music and a Chinese language teacher at Harvard], Boston Globe, January 1, 2014. was an ethnomusicologist and scholar of Chinese language and literature and was one of the first ten female full professors in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at Harvard University.Bell Yung, Robert Provine, Joseph Lam, Amy Stillman, Siu Wah Yu: CHINOPERL (Ohio State University) memorial bulletin ([http://chinoperl.osu.edu/news/rulan-chao-pian-1922-2013], reposted at [http://www.music.fas.harvard.edu/pian.html Profile], December 8, 2013. She was born and died in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Biography
Rulan Chao Pian was born in 1922 to a prominent Chinese family: her parents, the linguist Yuen Ren Chao and the physician and food writer Buwei Yang Chao, had resided in Cambridge since 1920, after her father was appointed to the faculty at Harvard. After travels in China and France, the family returned to the United States, traveling to Hawaii, New Haven, and Washington D.C. She studied some piano as a youth, though frequent travels made this difficult.[http://rulanchaopian.lib.cuhk.edu.hk/autobiography.htm Autobiographical essay], Chinese University of Hong Kong.
Pian enrolled in Radcliffe College where she received a Bachelor of Arts and Masters of Arts in music history (Western music) in 1943 (dated 1944) and 1946, respectively, and a Ph.D. in both East Asian Languages and in Music in 1960. Her music instructors included Archibald T. Davison, Edward Ballantine, John Ward, and Walter Piston. She taught at Harvard continuously from 1947 beginning as a teaching assistant in Chinese language, before being promoted to instructor and lecturer.
In 1974, she became Professor in the Department of Music and the Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations. She was one of three tenured female professors in the Harvard Music Department, one of thirteen total in the entire Faculty of Arts and Sciences.Anne C. Shreffler, [http://music.fas.harvard.edu/newsletter_summer_08.pdf "The More Things Change...: Music at Harvard, Then and Now] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150311133818/http://music.fas.harvard.edu/newsletter_summer_08.pdf |date=2015-03-11 }}, Harvard Music Newsletter 8.2, Summer 2008 In 1945, she married Theodore Pian, later a Professor of Aeronautics and Astronautics at MIT with whom she had a daughter, Canta Chao-po Pian. With Theodore, in 1975 she became co-master of Harvard's South House (now Cabot House), the first non-white housemasters in Harvard history.[http://www.thecrimson.com/article/2014/1/22/cabot-master-pian-obituary/ Renowned Music Scholar was First Nonwhite House Master], Harvard Crimson January 22, 2014 Pian was also one of the first female housemasters; a portrait of her with Chinese musical instruments hangs in the house.[http://www.boston.com/news/education/higher/articles/2010/11/07/harvard_aims_to_reflect_diverse_faces_in_portraits/ Harvard Aims to Reflect Diverse Faces in Portraits], Boston Globe, November 7, 2010. She retired from Harvard in 1992, but continued to teach students individually in her home, some of whom lived with her upon their arrival from China, such as the composer Lei Liang who credits her as one of his most important mentors and musical influences.[http://musicweb.ucsd.edu/media/news.php?query_status=archived&query_id=68 Interview with Lei Liang], musicweb.ucsd.edu. Accessed April 2024.
With her father, she edited and translated her mother's How to Cook and Eat in Chinese, the book responsible for inventing and introducing the terms stir fry and pot sticker into English.From Buwei Yang Chao's preface: "I cooked my dishes in Chinese, my daughter Rulan put my Chinese into English and my husband finding the English dull, put much of it back into Chinese again". Quoted in Epstein, Jason. [https://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/13/magazine/food-chinese-characters.html?pagewanted=all&src=pm FOOD; "Chinese Characters"], The New York Times. June 13, 2004. Retrieved July 31, 2013.
Death
Pian died of pulmonary fibrosis. After her death, she was widely eulogized in various obituaries."In Memoriam: Rulan Chao Pian, 1922-2013," Women in Academia Report December 24, 2013, p. 24[http://rulanchaopian.lib.cuhk.edu.hk/inmemoryII.htm In Memory of Professor Rulan Chao Pian], Chinese University of Hong Kong A memorial at Harvard was held on March 30, 2014[http://www.music.fas.harvard.edu/pian.html Rulan Pian], Harvard Music Department and an exhibition in her memory was held at Chinese University of Hong Kong.[http://rulanchaopian.lib.cuhk.edu.hk/inmemoryII.htm Exhibition information], rulanchaopian.lib.cuhk.edu.hk. Accessed April 7, 2024.
Professional work and honors
Rulan Pian was the author of Song Dynasty Musical Sources and Their Interpretation (published by Harvard University Press, 1967) which won the 1968 Otto Kinkeldey Award from the American Musicological Society for the most distinguished book in musicology, one of three winners dedicated to the study of non-western music.[http://www.ams-net.org/awards/kinkeldeywinners.php Otto Kinkeldey Award Winners], American Musicological Society, Retrieved 29 March 2014 Other publications focused on Peking opera and drum songs. She played many western and non-western instruments, including the piano, chyn, koto, biwa, ryuteki, and various Indonesian gamelan instruments.
In Chinese language studies she is known for her A Syllabus to the Mandarin Primer among other publications. She was one of the founders of the Conference on Chinese Oral and Performing Literature, CHINOPERL. Her work was among the first to take into account the importance of tonal inflections, rhythm, and other traditionally "musical" inflections in the study of oral literature.
Pian was a Fellow of the Academia Sinica in Taiwan.{{cite encyclopedia | title=Pian, Rulan Chao | encyclopedia=New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians | publisher=Macmillan | author=Lam, Joseph S. C. | editor=Tyrrell, John | year=2001 | edition=2nd | location=Oxford}} She was named an Honorary Member of the Society for Ethnomusicology, the society's highest honor, in 2004.{{cite web | url=http://www.ethnomusicology.org/?page=HonoraryMembers | title=Honorary Membership | publisher=Society for Ethnomusicology | access-date=25 July 2014}} A Festschrift, The Musicological Juncture: Essays in Honor of Rulan Chao Pian, ed. Bell Yung and Joseph S. C. Lam was published by Harvard University in 1994.
Her papers are housed in the University Library System of the Chinese University of Hong Kong. A list of her publications is available on [http://rulanchaopian.lib.cuhk.edu.hk/byrulan.htm the library's website].
References
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Further reading
- {{cite journal |last = Link |first = Perry| title= Jaw Laoshy" and Teaching Chinese" |journal =CHINOPERL: Journal of Chinese Oral and Performing Literature |volume =33 |issue = 2 |pages =158–179 |date =2014 |doi = 10.1179/0193777414Z.00000000025|s2cid = 178760927|ref= none}} Reminiscences by Thomas Bartlett, June Dreyer, Charles Hayford, Perry Link, James Pusey.
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Category:American musicologists
Category:American women musicologists
Category:Harvard University faculty
Category:People from Cambridge, Massachusetts
Category:Radcliffe College alumni
Category:American ethnomusicologists
Category:Women ethnomusicologists
Category:American women anthropologists