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Title The Fu Genre of Imperial China : Studies in the Rhapsodic Imagination / edited by Nicholas Morrow Williams.

Publication Info. Leeds : ARC Humanities Press, [2019]

Item Status

Description 1 online resource.
Physical Medium polychrome
Description text file
Series East meets West
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents Front Cover; Half-title; Series information; Title page; Copyright information; Table of contents; Preface; Body; Chapter 1. Introduction: The Rhapsodic Imagination; Part One. Recitation and Display; Chapter 2. The Origins of the Term "Fu" as a Literary Genre of Recitation; The Puchen . Theory: "Directly Displaying"; Challenging the Puchen Theory; The Recitation Theory; The Liu shi and the Recitation Theory; An Etymological Approach by Jia Jinhua; Another Etymological Approach by Chen Yunzhu; Fu as a Literary Genre of Recitation61; Chapter 3. Into the New Realm of Belles Lettres
Part Two. Lyricism and FormChapter 4. The Assimilation and Dissimilation of Fu and Shi Poetry up to the Tang Dynasty; The Pre-Qin Period and Han Dynasty; "Fu Is an Outflow of the Ancient Songs": Canonizing a Genre Through Assimilation; "To Recite without Singing Is Called Fu": Establishing Self-Identity through Dissimilation; The Wei, Jin, and Northern and Southern Dynasties; Shi and Fu Pieces with the Same Title; Lyricization of the Fu in the Southern Dynasties; The "Fu-icization" of Verse and the Rise of the Fu de ti; Conclusion
Chapter 5. Xu Wei's Early Modern Rhapsodies: Catalogue and Critique, Lyricism and LogicDreams of Good Taste: "What Others Ignore, I Alone Study in Detail"; The Garden of Metaphors: Xu Wei's "Rhapsody on (Poems about) Peonies"; Evoking the Self as Aesthetic Object: Evolution of the Yongwu Mode; Influence; Conclusion; Part Three. Philosophy and Dialogue; Chapter 6. The Metaphysical Rhapsody of the Six Dynasties; The Rise of the Metaphysical Rhapsody: In Search of Nonbeing; The Buddhist Conquest of the Metaphysical Rhapsody; Coda
Chapter 7. Argumentation and Generic Change in the Mid-Tang FuLi Guan's "Ku yu fu"; The Interplay of Modes: Readings of "Ku yu fu"; Textual Affinities; Further Lexical Considerations; Rhyme; Reconsidering the Fu/Shelun Relationship; Conclusions; Part Four. Critique and Protest; Chapter 8. The Hidden Message of Zhang Heng's "Contemplating the Mystery"; The Imaginary Journey in the "Contemplating the Mystery"; Comparing the Five Imaginary Journey Poems; The Journeys to the Four Cardinal Points; Conclusions
Chapter 9. A New Discourse on "Lament for the South" in the Fu of the Ming-Qing Transition1The Collective Understanding of "Lament for the South"; The Yu Xin Controversy; "What Soil Remains Untainted?"; Bibliography; Index
Summary The first volume in English to examine the fu, one of the major genres of Chinese literature, from its origins up to the late imperial era.
Local Note eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America
Subject Chinese poetry -- History and criticism.
Chinese poetry.
Fu -- History and criticism.
Fu.
LITERARY CRITICISM -- Asian -- Chinese.
Genre/Form Electronic books.
Electronic books.
Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Added Author Williams, Nicholas Morrow, editor.
Other Form: Print version : 9781641893312
ISBN 9781641893336 (electronic book)
1641893338 (electronic book)
9781641893312