Thematic Contents
Preface to the How to Read Chinese Literature Series
Preface to the Volume
Chronology of Historical Events
Symbols and Abbreviations
Introduction: The Cultural Role of Chinese Poetry, by Zong-qi
Cai
Part I: Pre-Han Times
1. Poetry and Diplomacy in The Zuo Commentary(Zuozhuan), by Wai-yee
Li
2. Poetry and Authorship: The Songs of Chu (Chuci), by Stephen
Owen
Part II: The Han Dynasty
3. Empire in Text: Sima Xiangru’s “Sir Vacuous/Imperial Park
Rhapsody”(“Zixu/Shanglin fu”), by Yu-yu Cheng and Gregory
Patterson
4. Poetry and Ideology: The Canonization of the Book of Poetry
(Shijing) During the Han, by Zong-qi Cai
5. Love Beyond the Grave: A Tragic Tale of Love and Marriage in Han
China, by Olga Lomová
Part III: The Six Dynasties
6. Heroes from Chaotic Times: The Three Caos, by Xinda Lian
7. The Worthies of the Bamboo Grove, by Nanxiu Qian
8. The Poetry of Reclusion: Tao Qian, by Alan Berkowitz
9. The Struggling Buddhist Mind: Shen Yue, by Meow Hui Goh
Part IV: The Tang Dynasty
10. Knight-Errantry: Tang Frontier Poems, by Tsung-Cheng Lin
11. Tang Civil Service Examinations, by Manling Luo
12. Tang Women at the Public/Private Divide, by Maija Bell
Samei
13. Poetry and Buddhist Enlightenment: Wang Wei and Han Shan, by
Chen Yinchi and Jing Chen
14. Drinking Alone Beneath the Moon: Li Bai and the Poetics of
Wine, by Paula Varsano
15. Du Fu: The Poet as Historian, by Jack W. Chen
16. Poetry and Literati Friendship: Bai Juyi and Yuan Zhen, by Ao
Wang
17. Li He: Poetry as Obsession, by Robert Ashmore
Acknowledgments
Contributors
Glossary-Index
Zong-qi Cai is professor of Chinese and comparative literature at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, and chair professor of Chinese literature at Lingnan University of Hong Kong. His books on Chinese poetry include How to Read Chinese Poetry: A Guided Anthology (2007) and How to Read Chinese Poetry Workbook (2012), both from Columbia University Press, as well as The Matrix of Lyric Transformation: Poetic Modes and Self-Presentation in Early Chinese Pentasyllabic Poetry (1996).
Devoted exclusively to the rich, fantastical, labyrinthine matrix
of poetry-making in ancient China. . . . [How to Read Chinese
Poetry in Context] is both a gem of fresh scholarship and a
compendium of luminous insights. . . . This book – in fact, the
entire series – will be a game changer.
*Los Angeles Review of Books, China Channel*
Zong-qi Cai is one of the finest scholars of Chinese poetry writing
today.
*Jonathan Chaves, The George Washington University*
Truly a landmark publication in the field of Chinese literary
scholarship.
*Shuen-fu Lin, University of Michigan*
In this magnificent volume on Chinese poetry, nineteen scholars
demonstrate the importance of cultural reading. From questions of
authorship to ideology, from the poetry of wars, heroes, women, and
knights-errant to that of Daoism and Buddhism, this book offers a
surprising and enlightening rereading of Chinese poetry and its
context.
*Kang-i Sun Chang, Yale University*
A splendid achievement! Intellectually rigorous and reader-friendly
at once, this collection of essays lets both novice and specialist
readers experience the beauty and poignancy of classical Chinese
poetry one well-chosen topic at a time.
*Patricia Sieber, Ohio State University*
This volume joins others in editor Zong-qi Cai’s How to Read
Chinese literature series as an important pedagogic and scholarly
resource. Leading authorities set seminal poetic texts, across
genres and periods, in their larger historical literary and
intellectual contexts. A great contribution to a broader
understanding of Chinese poetry.
*Ronald Egan, Stanford University*
The translations are of high caliber, carefully done and polished.
The book is user friendly.
*China Review International*
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