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The Story That Never Ends: Deconstructing the Narrative Myth of the Willow Pattern

The Willow Pattern ranks among the most recognizable decorative designs in Western ceramics, yet few household objects have concealed such an elaborate fiction beneath their familiar surface. For more than two centuries, the blue-and-white landscape has adorned dinner plates, teacups, serving platters, and porcelain ornaments in homes across Britain, Europe, North America, and beyond. Most people recognize the bridge, pagoda, willow tree, fence, and two birds flying across the sky. Many also know the romantic tale that accompanies the image: two forbidden lovers flee an oppressive father, escape across a bridge, perish together, and transform into eternal birds. The story appears ancient, Chinese, and deeply symbolic. In reality, it is largely a nineteenth-century British invention. The Willow Pattern represents far more than decorative porcelain. It demonstrates how manufacturers transformed commercial design into enduring mythology. More importantly, it reveals how domestic objects c...

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