Southern Identity and Southern Estrangement in Medieval Chinese Poetry
Southern Identity and Southern Estrangement in Medieval Chinese Poetry
Ping Wang
Nicholas Morrow Williams
Copyright Date: 2015
Edition: 1
Published by: Hong Kong University Press
Pages: 236
https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt14jxs56
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Book Info
Southern Identity and Southern Estrangement in Medieval Chinese Poetry
Book Description:

From ancient times, China’s remote and exotic South—a shifting and expanding region beyond the Yangtze River—has been an enduring theme in Chinese literature. For poets and scholar-officials in medieval China, the South was a barbaric frontier region of alienation and disease. But it was also a place of richness and fascination, and for some a site of cultural triumph over exile. The eight essays in this collection explore how tensions between pride in southern culture and anxiety over the alien qualities of the southern frontier were behind many of the distinctive features of medieval Chinese literature. They examine how prominent writers from this period depicted themselves and the South in poetic form through attitudes that included patriotic attachment and bitter exile. By the Tang dynasty, poetic symbols and clichés about the exotic South had become well established, though many writers were still able to use these in innovative ways. Southern Identity and Southern Estrangement in Medieval Chinese Poetry is the first work in English to examine the cultural south in classical Chinese poetry. The book incorporates original research on key poets, such as Lu Ji, Jiang Yan, Wang Bo, and Li Bai. It also offers a broad survey of cultural and historical trends during the medieval period, as depicted in poetry. The book will be of interest to students of Chinese literature and cultural history.

eISBN: 978-988-8313-00-6
Subjects: Language & Literature
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  1. Front Matter
    Front Matter (pp. i-iv)
  2. Table of Contents
    Table of Contents (pp. v-vi)
  3. Acknowledgments
    Acknowledgments (pp. vii-viii)
  4. List of Contributors
    List of Contributors (pp. ix-x)
  5. 1 Southland as Symbol
    1 Southland as Symbol (pp. 1-18)
    Ping Wang and Nicholas Morrow Williams

    China’s southeastern coastal provinces of Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Fujian, and Guangdong have been at the forefront of its modern revolution, leading economic expansion and cultural engagement. It has been Shanghai and Hong Kong, not the political capital of Beijing, that have served as the cradles of innovation and gateways for foreign ideas. But China’s southern regions have not always been closely integrated into its arc of development; to the contrary, they were once exotic and intimidating to Han Chinese. The ancient origins of the Chinese script, of traditional thought, of art and music, all lie to the north: for the Shang...

  6. 2 Southern Metal and Feather Fan: The “Southern Consciousness” of Lu Ji
    2 Southern Metal and Feather Fan: The “Southern Consciousness” of Lu Ji (pp. 19-42)
    David R. Knechtges

    In 1992, Professor Lin Wen-yueh 林文月 published an article on the “southern” consciousness of the Western Jin poets Pan Yue 潘岳(247-300) and Lu Ji 陸機(261-303) in which she compares the meaning ofnan南 or south in these two poets’ verse.¹ Professor Lin shows in poems that Pan Yue wrote when he was serving in office north of the Yellow River that the South to which he longed to return was the area south of the Yellow River, and especially the capital Luoyang. Lu Ji, on the other hand, after he left Wu and took up residence in Luoyang, wrote...

  7. 3 Fan Writing: Lu Ji, Lu Yun and the Cultural Transactions between North and South
    3 Fan Writing: Lu Ji, Lu Yun and the Cultural Transactions between North and South (pp. 43-78)
    Xiaofei Tian

    In 280, the Western Jin (265–317) army conquered the southern Kingdom of Wu and brought China under a single unified empire once again. In the following decade, objects and people from the Wu region flowed into Luoyang, the Jin capital in the north, attracted by the glittering court life and the power of the center. One object in particular caught the fancy of the northerners: the fan made of bird feathers, often those of a crane. Fans commonly used in the north were either square or round, made of bamboo and silk. In contrast, the white feather fan from...

  8. 4 Plaint, Lyricism, and the South
    4 Plaint, Lyricism, and the South (pp. 79-108)
    Ping Wang

    In one of the most memorable passages of the preface of Zhong Rong’s 鍾螺(468-518)Shi pin詩品(Gradations of poets), he theorizes about the physiology of human activities related to poetry—its making and chanting. The movements of things in the outside world and the alternations of seasonal phenomena have an impact on humankind. Humans are stirred by and driven to poetry. When friends gather for a wonderful occasion, poetry is the natural medium for expressions of conviviality. In contrast, when people are separated from their own kind, they take refuge in voicing “plaint.” At this point in his analysis, Zhong...

  9. 5 Farther South: Jiang Yan in Darkest Fujian
    5 Farther South: Jiang Yan in Darkest Fujian (pp. 109-136)
    Paul W. Kroll

    By the mid-fifth century, nearly a hundred and fifty years had passed since the disintegration of the Western Jin dynasty and the consequent vast removal southward of the aristocracy and the educated elite. Several generations had been born and raised in the South, with Jiankang 建康 firmly established as a capital city with by now its own imperial history. As newly founded “Chinese” traditions combining northern and southern sensibilities had taken root in the Jiangnan 江南 area and westward through the middle Yangtze region, the earlier dream of a military reconquest of the North had faded. Even though many places...

  10. 6 The Pity of Spring: A Southern Topos Reimagined by Wang Bo and Li Bai
    6 The Pity of Spring: A Southern Topos Reimagined by Wang Bo and Li Bai (pp. 137-164)
    Nicholas Morrow Williams

    Though the territory of the ancient state of Chu extended as far north as the southern part of modern Henan province, Chu was the southernmost of the major pre-Qin states. Yet even further south lay the area of Jiangnan 江南, the land south of the Yangtze River, a more exotic and unknown region entirely. Though sometimes referring to the Southland in general, the term Jiangnan could also indicate the specific region around Qianzhong 黑今中 Commandery (in western Hunan province).¹ Jiangnan designated the place of Qu Yuan’s exile from Chu proper,² and hence the geographical counterpart of separation and political frustration,...

  11. 7 The Stele and the Drunkard: Two Poetic Allusions from Xiangyang
    7 The Stele and the Drunkard: Two Poetic Allusions from Xiangyang (pp. 165-188)
    Jie Wu

    Xiangyang 襲陽,a city on the south bank of the Han 漢 River in central China, was in medieval times a key crossroads for the Jing-Chu 荆楚 region (mainly present-day Hubei and Hunan provinces).¹ Since the Han dynasty Xiangyang has been the hometown or ancestral home of numerous literary figures, such as the Tang poets Du Shenyan 杜審言 (ca. 645-708), Meng Haoran 孟浩然(689-740), and Pi Rixiu 皮曰休(ca. 834-ca. 902). Among the many places of interest in Xiangyang, the Xi Family Pond (Xijiachi 習家池) and Mount Xian 峴 are prominent in history and poetry.²

    Mount Xian is about two and half miles...

  12. 8 Jiangnan from the Ninth Century On: The Routinization of Desire
    8 Jiangnan from the Ninth Century On: The Routinization of Desire (pp. 189-206)
    Stephen Owen

    The aura of place depends a great deal on whether or not it is home. Home has its own aura, which is quite distinct from the place you would like to go that is “not home.” For the Southern Dynasties Jiangnan was a home that was not quite home. The northern emigrés sett led in and, with a literary language filled with references to the North, learned to make Jiangnan another discursive home. When the South ceased to be a political center around the turn of the seventh century, the southern textual world almost completely displaced the northern textual legacy....

  13. Works Cited
    Works Cited (pp. 207-218)
  14. Index
    Index (pp. 219-226)
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