Emeritus
mpow@umich.eduOffice Information:
phone: 734.764.5402
Education/Degree:
PhD University of ChicagoHighlighted Work and Publications

China and England: The Preindustrial Struggle for Justice in Word and Image
Martin Powers
From the reader's report:
The author argues that the demand for the just treatment of ordinary people is to be found in all traditions, even as each tradition finds its only peculiar ways to deflect attention and political will from the achievement of social justice. He is unfazed at crossing disciplinary and regional boundaries, nor is he daunted by the challenge of moving ever deeper into the past to reconstruct the lost history of people making common cause in the public good. At the same time, Powers is careful to avoid teleology and not argue that our understanding of...
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A Companion to Chinese Art
Martin Powers
Exploring the history of art in China from its earliest incarnations to the present day, this comprehensive volume includes two dozen newly-commissioned essays spanning the theories, genres, and media central to Chinese art and theory throughout its history.
- Provides an exceptional collection of essays promoting a comparative understanding of China’s long record of cultural production
- Brings together an international team of scholars from East and West, whose contributions range from an overview of pre-modern theory, to those exploring calligraphy, fine painting...

Pattern and Person: Ornament, Society, and Self in Classical China
Martin Powers
In Classical China, crafted artifacts offered a material substrate for abstract thought as graphic paradigms for social relationships. Focusing on the fifth to second centuries B.C., Martin Powers explores how these paradigms continued to inform social thought long after the material substrate had been abandoned. In this detailed study, the author makes the claim that artifacts are never neutral: as a distinctive possession, each object—through the abstracting function of style—offers a material template for scales of value. Likewise, through style, pictorial forms can make claims about material... See More