Kim Hunter Gordon Publishes New Book on Kunqu’s Musical and Theatrical Traditions

We are delighted to share that Prof. Kim Hunter Gordon, a member of the CSCC Meanings, Identities, and Communities Cluster, has published a new book exploring the history, performance, and contemporary significance of Kunqu.

Kunqu: China’s Classical Song-drama (Bloomsbury Publishing, 2026) offers a comprehensive study of this foundational musical and theatrical tradition, drawing on Prof. Hunter Gordon’s expertise as both a scholar and practitioner of Kunqu singing.

Book Description (from the publisher):

From its origins in the poetic tradition and its refinement in the southern salons of the 16th century, to its 18th-century theatrical heyday and patriotic revival in modern times, this book introduces Kunqu and its enduring role in shaping cultural life. As China’s classical musical and theatrical tradition, Kunqu is essential to understanding the country’s artistic heritage.

The rich body of drama and poetry associated with Kunqu has often been studied independently of its performance history. By contrast, this book places stage practice and singing at the centre. Kunqu treats poetry and music as inseparable: the tonal and prosodic qualities of Chinese words and the melodies that carry them are mutually dependent.

From Ming gardens and rowdy Qing playhouses to the Manchu imperial court, Republican singing societies, and online forums today, debates over how Kunqu should be sung have never ceased. Hunter Gordon shows how these debates provide a model for understanding the genre as a whole: just as its vocal delivery has always been contested, so too has its staging.

With a repertoire that remains relatively stable, Kunqu is marked by tensions of interpretation and orthodoxy that place enormous weight on the fine details of performance, making it one of the world’s most dynamic classical performance traditions.

We extend our congratulations to Prof. Kim Hunter Gordon on this great achievement and on the publication of a work that will contributes to ongoing scholarship on Chinese musical and theatrical traditions.

To learn more about Gordon’s research and his engagement with Kunqu, we invite you to revisit our earlier featured story: