01472nas a2200157 4500000000100000000000100001000000100002008004100003100001800044245016600062856014600228300001200374490000700386520090100393022002001294 2015 d1 aAnnie Rollins00aChinese Shadow Puppetry s Changing Apprentice System: Questions of Continuance and a Survey of Remaining Shadow Puppet Practitioners in Mainland China, 2008-2013 uhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84937859263&doi=10.1353%2fatj.2015.0003&partnerID=40&md5=acef53f476695b1d77b9daf63a07eb99 a295-3180 v323 aChinese shadow puppetry s fading master-apprentice system poses urgent questions of how best to ensure the inherited practice is passed to the next generation. With profiles of current Chinese shadow puppet practitioners, this article surveys the spectrum of survival scenarios. Questions of continuance will depend on increased awareness of the form s tenuous future and increased efficacy of cultural heritage preservation programs, such as UNESCO s Intangible Cultural Heritage project.Annie Katsura Rollins is a researcher and practitioner of traditional Chinese shadow puppetry. She was awarded a Fulbright Fellowship to canvass mainland China for the remaining artists in 2011 and began a PhD on the art form at Montreal s Concordia University in 2013. Rollins recently launched the first comprehensive Chinese shadow puppetry informational site in English at www.chineseshadowpuppetry.com. a07425457 (ISSN)