Shen Yun Performing Arts
  • Tentang Shen Yun
    The Performance
    Baru kepada Shen Yun?
    9 Ciri-ciri Shen Yun
    Tarian Klasik China
    Orkestra Simfoni
    Factsheet
    The Company
    Cerita Kami
    Kehidupan di Shen Yun
    Cabaran Yang Kami Hadapi
  • Artis-artis
  • Video
  • Apa yang Baru
    Apa yang Baru
    Berita
    Blog
    Dalam Media
  • Siaran Akhbar
  • Soalan Lazim
  • Ulasan Penonton
  • Belajar Surat Berita Cari
    Melayu
  • English
  • 中文正體
  • 中文简体
  • 日本語
  • 한국어
  • Česky
  • Deutsch
  • Español
  • Français
  • Indonesia
  • Italiano
  • Nederlands
  • Polski
  • Português
  • Latviski
  • Pусский
  • Română
  • Svenska
  • Việt
  • עברית
  • Norsk
  • Tiket & Info
    Menu
    Shen Yun Logo
    Tiket
    Apa yang Baru
    Menu
    • Tentang Shen Yun
      • Baru kepada Shen Yun? 9 Ciri-ciri Shen Yun Cerita Kami Kehidupan di Shen Yun Fakta tentang Shen Yun Cabaran Yang Kami Hadapi Tarian Klasik China Orkestra Simfoni
    • Artis-artis
    • Video
    • Apa yang Baru
      • Apa yang Baru Berita Blog Dalam Media
    • Siaran Akhbar
    • Soalan Lazim
    • Ulasan Penonton
    Shen Yun 9 Characteristics Link Image

    Apa yang Membuat Kami Unik?

    DISCOVER THE 9 CHARACTERISTICS
    • Belajar
    • Langgan
    • Cari
    Language
    • English
    • 中文正體
    • 中文简体
    • 日本語
    • 한국어
    • Česky
    • Deutsch
    • Español
    • Français
    • Indonesia
    • Italiano
    • Nederlands
    • Polski
    • Português
    • Latviski
    • Pусский
    • Română
    • Svenska
    • Việt
    • עברית
    • Norsk
      Blog
      Kembali Blog > Dancing ABCs: What You Will Never See in Print

    Dancing ABCs: What You Will Never See in Print

    DancingABC

    Many New Year’s resolutions fall flat because of unrealistic expectations, so I’ve simplified for 2012. The list is still under construction (hey, the Chinese New Year won’t arrive until the 23rd), but one thing is set: this year, during my off time between rehearsals and performances, I’m relearning the English alphabet.

    Back in elementary school, the cursive alphabet was one of my greatest inspirations. My classroom had a laminated banner with letters from A to Z hanging over the chalkboard. Sometimes, when doing double division or editing run-on sentences became too much to bear, I would look up for guidance. And the cursive letters would smile in beneficence until all was well again.         

    My teacher taught us cursive in 3rd grade. I loved those lessons, finding a ceaseless joy and thrill in tracing the letters in my exercise book. Truthfully, they were shaky, trembling specimens—as if the alphabet had ingested an extra-strong double-shot espresso—but A reassured me that practice would make perfect, someday.

    A and B were my best friends in class. They always tried to sneak home with me, usually by hiding on the last page of my tests or homework. My parents gladly gave them a place of honor at the dinner table. Unfortunately, this made C jealous. The next time I had a math test, he put himself in place of A and B. Mom had made A’s favorite dish and was disappointed by the uninvited guest. Dad was outraged by C’s rudeness and gave him the cold shoulder all night. Poor C rarely showed his face again. 

    In later years, teachers demanded typewritten papers to avoid bad handwriting. The computer screen forced A and I (the person, not the letter) into a long-distance relationship. Oh sure, we still shared secrets and created literary masterpieces, but something was different. We were drifting apart.

    One day, I was drafting a thank you letter. Dear Sir, I thought I’d begin, then paused when my pen touched paper. For some reason, I couldn’t remember how to write a cursive D. Filling up half a page with possible candidates didn’t jog my memory, so I Googled it. The image results for cursive alphabets overwhelmed me with nostalgia.

    Years of typing school papers had trained me to write in print. Sometimes a loop or a swirl would sneak in to accent my T or H, but I’d always feel slightly guilty afterwards. The classroom was no place for fancy letters. Even Century Schoolbook was derided as old-fashioned and dated. No, the hallowed halls of academia were ruled by the legions of Times New Roman and his cohorts, Veranda and Arial.

    But deep down inside, I knew I was born to write in cursive. And so I began to look further into the past—to a time when accenting letters with flourishes was the norm. A time when pens were refilled by hand and a writer could be identified by the ink stains on his fingers.

    A fountain pen was the first to reciprocate my efforts. She introduced me to her grandmother, a dip pen. Despite our differences in age, we quickly became friends. Now this venerable elder is teaching me the nuances of Copperplate—English round hand, a type of cursive-styled calligraphy.

    If dance is like poetry in motion, then cursive is like waltzing with a pen. Each letter is a soloist whose curves, dots, or dashes swell with character and charisma. The words combine as dancing sentences, with the paragraph as their program and the page as the stage. For Chinese characters, the brush supersedes the western dip pen, yet both are fluent in the language of elegance and beauty.

    Yesterday I tried to write a Copperplate “A”. One side was rough and blotchy, as if A had just woken up from a long, long nap. But the other side had an upturned curve, almost like a smile. 

    • Artist Perspectives
    • Chinese Language & Writing
    • Life on tour
    Jade2

    Jade Zhan

    Contributing writer

    Lihat semua siaran

    January 17, 2012

    Comments
    verification

    Sebelumnya

    Out of This World Experience

    Seterusnya

    With Love Philadelphia XOXO
    Terkini
    • Agama apakah Shen Yun?
      Dunhuang Sypa Thumb WhatisSY
    • Tahun Naga - 9 Perkara yang Perlu Tahu tentang Makhluk Mitos Ini
      9things
    Paling Popular
    • Semua
    • Berita
    • Blog
    Tunjukkan Lagi
    Tunjukkan Lagi
    Tunjukkan Lagi

    Tags

    • Artist Perspectives
    • Chinese Language & Writing
    • Life on tour
    Shen Yun logo golden
    Shen Yun logo golden

    Shen Yun Performing Arts yang ditubuhkan di New York, ialah syarikat tarian dan muzik China klasik terulung di dunia, pada tahun 2006. Ia mempersembahkan tarian klasik Cina, tarian etnik dan rakyat serta tarian berasaskan cerita, dengan iringan orkestra dan penghibur solo. Selama 5,000 tahun, budaya ketuhanan berkembang di tanah China. Melalui muzik dan tarian yang menakjubkan, Shen Yun menghidupkan semula budaya yang mulia ini. Shen Yun, atau 神韻, boleh diterjemahkan sebagai: "Keindahan makhluk syurga yang menari."

    Tentang
  • Baru kepada Shen Yun?
  • Orkestra Simfoni Shen Yun
  • Kehidupan di Shen Yun
  • Fakta tentang Shen Yun
  • Cabaran Yang Kami Hadapi
  • Shen Yun & Kerohanian
  • Temui Artis-artis
  • Soalan Lazim
  • Video
  • Terkini
  • Tentang Shen Yun
  • Artis-artis
  • Ulasan
  • Dalam Media
  • Apa yang Baru
  • Pilihan
  • Berita
  • Blog
  • Ulasan
  • Dalam Media
  • Belajar
  • Tarian China
  • Muzik
  • Muzik Vokal
  • Pakaian Shen Yun
  • Tayangan Digital
  • Props Shen Yun
  • Kisah dan Sejarah
  • Shen Yun dan Budaya Tradisional China
  • Berinteraksi dengan kami:
    Ikuti Kami di Gan Jing World
    Tandatangani Buku Pelawat Kami
    Kenali Lebih Lanjut tentang Shen Yun
    di Platform Penstriman Kami
    Pusat Penilaian Kemahiran Seni
    Barangan Mewah dan Kenang-kenangan
    Diilhamkan oleh Shen Yun
    Penari Shen Yun
    Laman Web Rasmi Seni Persembahan Shen Yun Hak Cipta ©2025 Shen Yun Performing Arts. Semua Hak Terpelihara.
    Hubungi Kami Syarat-syarat Privasi Peta laman