出版社: Cambria Press
副标题: The “Fragrant and Bedazzling” Movement (1600-1930)
出版年: 2019-2-5
页数: 426
定价: $ 124.99
装帧: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781604979527
内容简介 · · · · · ·
This book is in the Cambria Sinophone World Series, headed by Victor Mair (University of Pennsylvania).
In Chinese literary history, the construction of images of beautiful women by literati tended to reach a high tide during periods of political crisis. This study focuses on two related fin-de-siècle moments at the turns of the seventeenth century from the late Ming to the ear...
This book is in the Cambria Sinophone World Series, headed by Victor Mair (University of Pennsylvania).
In Chinese literary history, the construction of images of beautiful women by literati tended to reach a high tide during periods of political crisis. This study focuses on two related fin-de-siècle moments at the turns of the seventeenth century from the late Ming to the early Qing and the twentieth century from the late Qing to the early Republic. Focusing on the reform of narrative discourse, scholars have demonstrated important connections between the late Ming and late Qing periods in the realm of cultural practice. This study not only generally supports the linkage as envisioned in their pioneering studies, but also enriches this cutting-edge framework. More specifically, with a focus on poetry, it builds on the general observation of earlier scholars that romantic impulse, sensationalism, eroticism, and iconoclasm, the salient characteristics of late-Ming culture, extended into the early Qing and even later.
This book charts a history in which sensualist poetry reached an unprecedented and unsurpassed height in the hands of the late Ming poets, experienced a period of hibernation during most of the Qing, and then reemerged to awaken the senses of late-Qing and early-Republican readers. The book demonstrates this cultural continuity in two inseparable parts: First, the disenfranchised literati of the late-Ming period used the marginality of sensual and feminine discursive space to make room for originality and authenticity. Their poetics and politics constituted a vibrant part of the late-Ming countercultural movement against orthodox Neo-Confucianism. Second, echoing their late Ming predecessors, late-Qing and early-Republican sensualist writers had started their anti-Confucian cultural campaign in the “traditional” field of poetry and poetics. This was prior to the well-recognized May Fourth revolt against Confucianism and the blossoming of writings on “private feelings” in modern vernacular Chinese.
Studies of twentieth-century China have vigorously questioned the Western conceptualization of modernity, and problematized the May Fourth paradigm as the center of China’s modernization. Delving into a wide range of rich materials from the late Ming to the early Republican period in the classical shi poetry, an understudied genre in studies of these eras, this project not only joins the efforts of decentering the May Fourth discourse and practice, but also aims to call more attention to the nuances of that which was pushed into the “premodern” past by our “modern” lenses.
“Fragrant and bedazzling” (xiangyan) is a Chinese phrase synonymous with sensual and bewitching feminine beauty and, in literature, eroticism. Sensual literature, even to many scholars today, is morally suspect. Situated in China’s recent past from the late sixteenth to the early twentieth century, this study has brought to light a literary tradition and underscored intellectual trends that have been neglected, marginalized, misunderstood, and even condemned. Many scholars have pointed out the centrality of sentiment to China’s process of modernization. Paradoxically, because the rich corpus of the texts under study focus on sensuality and romantic sentiment, they gradually became part of a lost world—a literary past that even present-day scholars sometimes cannot take seriously.
Poetry was the most venerated literary genre in imperial China. How did sensuality seep into poetry, the instrumental genre held by Confucianism in moral cultivation? Why did this process gather momentum during the late Ming and the late-Qing–early-Republican periods? And what were the results? This study argues that an unprecedented outpouring of sensualism—and a body of critical discourse to support it—constituted an attack on the old ideology and an assertion of an alternative literary modernism by way of renewing the marginalized poetics and aesthetics of femininity, sensuality, and romance in China’s distinct tradition. This study is the first to tell the story of how and why sensuality flourished during two fin-de-siècle moments.
The Poetics and Politics of Sensuality in China reveals a neglected part of history that the freelance intelligentsia that emerged in late imperial and early Republican China countered the political mainstream by drawing on a long yet marginalized tradition of sensual lyricism. Especially important were the works of literati during the last decades of the Ming established a distinctive poetics of individual sensuality that defied Neo-Confucianism. Intelligentsia of the late Qing and early Republican periods revived this tradition in response to the radical cultural transformation, the political corruption of the 1911 Revolution and the Second Revolution of 1913.
The Poetics and Politics of Sensuality in China will offer the first history of how “fragrant and bedazzling” became a guiding aesthetic of countercultural movements from the late Ming to the early Republican era; roughly, from the late sixteenth century to the early twentieth century. Sensualist poets and other writers of these eras extolled amorous desire and romantic love. Through erotic poetry, they rebelled against not only orthodox Neo-Confucianism but also the radical cultural reform agenda of the late Qing and the New Culture Movement of the Republic. In eras that emphasized sociopolitical functions of literature, they promoted classical lyricism and satisfaction of individual expressive needs. Drawing on extensive archival research, this book argues that sensual lyricism is more political than its sensuous surfaces—and China’s lyrical tradition is sexier and more “modern”—than existing histories have led us to believe. It demonstrates that dominant political ideologies and cultural practices of early modern China always faced counteractions in the form of a discourse of sensuality, femininity, and romance. The general pattern is that the greater the suppression the individual body, the more vibrantly poets promote sensuality and romance as a moral goal in its own right.
This book is original in its sources and its critical framework. Most of its primary sources, especially the monumental anthologies of sensual poetry made in both the late Ming and the late Qing periods, are brought to critical attention for the first time. Bridging literary and intellectual history, the study surveys three hundred years of poetry and essays, from individual collections to voluminous anthologies, and from traditional books to modern magazines. The first half of the book focuses on materials produced during the Ming; the rest examines publications of the turn of the twentieth century. The sources examined in the book show that poetics of sensuality was political on personal and historical levels in and beyond the late imperial period. Sensuality and decadence, the author argues, were forces of literary modernization, as well as an important continuity between the eras often referred to as “premodern” and “modern.” The author also relates Chinese sensual literature to “decadent” movements in late nineteenth and early twentieth century Europe. In both contexts, while perceived as a reflection of moral decay, decadent literature posed challenges to social and cultural norms by representing the repressed individual body and its cultural expressions. This comparative perspective brings us toward a better understanding of sensualism as a part of modernity.
The Poetics and Politics of Sensuality in China will be an invaluable resource to scholars of literary and intellectual movements in late imperial and modern China, sexuality, gender, literary decadence, modernism, countercultures, and erotic literature.
作者简介 · · · · · ·
Xiaorong Li is an associate professor of Chinese literature at the University of California, Santa Barbara. She holds a PhD and an MA from McGill University, as well as an MA and BA from Peking University. Dr. Li is the author of Women’s Poetry of Late Imperial China: Transforming the Inner Chambers, and her articles have been published in several journals, such as Nan Nü: Men,...
Xiaorong Li is an associate professor of Chinese literature at the University of California, Santa Barbara. She holds a PhD and an MA from McGill University, as well as an MA and BA from Peking University. Dr. Li is the author of Women’s Poetry of Late Imperial China: Transforming the Inner Chambers, and her articles have been published in several journals, such as Nan Nü: Men, Women, and Gender in China and Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies.
目录 · · · · · ·
Chapter 1. “Recluses in the Arms of Women”: The Emergent Non-official Literati and Their discourse in the Late Ming
Chapter 2. “Phantom Clouds and Rain”: Wang Cihui’s Sensualist Poetry as an Alternative Route to Self-Realization
Chapter 3. Sensualism or Sensationalism?: The Textual Politics of Poems on Beautiful Women
Chapter 4. “Food and Sex are the Principal Desires”: The Elevation of Sensuality during the Late Qing
Chapter 5. “One Thousand Beauties” and “Five Hundred Poets”: Making Monumental Sensualist Anthologies
· · · · · · (更多)
Chapter 1. “Recluses in the Arms of Women”: The Emergent Non-official Literati and Their discourse in the Late Ming
Chapter 2. “Phantom Clouds and Rain”: Wang Cihui’s Sensualist Poetry as an Alternative Route to Self-Realization
Chapter 3. Sensualism or Sensationalism?: The Textual Politics of Poems on Beautiful Women
Chapter 4. “Food and Sex are the Principal Desires”: The Elevation of Sensuality during the Late Qing
Chapter 5. “One Thousand Beauties” and “Five Hundred Poets”: Making Monumental Sensualist Anthologies
Chapter 6. “I Love Beautiful Women as Much as my Country”: The Political Agenda of Fragrant and Bedazzling Magazine
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
· · · · · · (收起)
喜欢读"The Poetics and Politics of Sensuality in China"的人也喜欢 · · · · · ·
The Poetics and Politics of Sensuality in China的书评 · · · · · · ( 全部 0 条 )
论坛 · · · · · ·
在这本书的论坛里发言以下书单推荐 · · · · · · ( 全部 )
- late imperial china (metamorphosis)
- 古典诗学经典(2)【欧美为主】 (那颗晴空)
- 唐诗在域外 (蓝田)
- masculinity (酒药女佛)
- 大饼 (菜园子看守)
谁读这本书? · · · · · ·
二手市场
· · · · · ·
- 在豆瓣转让 有158人想读,手里有一本闲着?
订阅关于The Poetics and Politics of Sensuality in China的评论:
feed: rss 2.0










4 有用 延陵季子_ 2023-04-15 01:40:49 北京
香草美人vs艳体。艳体发展史三个里程碑:宫体诗;晚唐韩偓温李;晚明王次回(与官僚制度不合作姿态)。帝国晚期及之后感性诗学在个人和历史层面上都是政治性的。 清末民初,香艳作品流行:被压抑的话题拥有巨大市场;维新之潮(拒绝主导清代文坛的正统儒家价值观,重寻国粹。如袁祖光,富有改革精神,但反对压制中国抒情传统;要求保留本土文化传统,同时也挑战传统的道德和审美标准);在面对西方时对中国传统的强调(如周瘦鹃... 香草美人vs艳体。艳体发展史三个里程碑:宫体诗;晚唐韩偓温李;晚明王次回(与官僚制度不合作姿态)。帝国晚期及之后感性诗学在个人和历史层面上都是政治性的。 清末民初,香艳作品流行:被压抑的话题拥有巨大市场;维新之潮(拒绝主导清代文坛的正统儒家价值观,重寻国粹。如袁祖光,富有改革精神,但反对压制中国抒情传统;要求保留本土文化传统,同时也挑战传统的道德和审美标准);在面对西方时对中国传统的强调(如周瘦鹃,被随后更为激进的五四派批判)。 作者认为感性和颓废是文学现代化的力量,试图从中国本土资源中寻找中国文学的“现代性”,弥合文学界所谓“现代”“前现代”文学(这种划分是在西方现代性冲击下作出的断代)之间的差距。从晚明到民国早期的感情抒情,表明了所谓的前现代和现代文学之间的连续性。#略读之再也不想学英语 (展开)
1 有用 海边的小卡罗 2022-10-31 22:13:18 中国澳门
冷门诗学佳作,但英文欠佳。明末与民初的香艳诗沿于萧梁时代的宫体诗(玉台新咏)与晚唐宋初的西昆体。田晓菲在《烽火与流星》也言及宫体诗可为儒学衰微下对经典的抵制。诗歌未必依从孔教的治世理想,于是香痕奁影渐成明末“山人”的“色隐”追逐。对感官物欲的关注转向或可溯源至更早的缘情绮靡传统。尽管有清一朝如沈德潜批驳陆机的诠释背离了“香草美人”的儒教传统,但同时期如黄景仁却仍对香艳秘事不吝笔端。
1 有用 桓洛 2024-10-19 20:26:19 新加坡
选题非常的有意思,主要讨论晚明和晚清两个时代的艳诗风潮,作者将其视为一种反主流的诗学思想以及对西方浪漫文化的对抗(或者也可以说整合)。其实看到作者提到黄景仁,我本来是希望看到一些关于盛清时代的艳诗讨论的,除却黄景仁,作者也提到过随园及其背后代表的性灵风尚,可惜这一段略显薄弱,其实袁枚作为一个以自身好恶为诗学审美标准的人,他的艳诗应当也是很值得大量讨论的。最后依然跟现代性扯上关系,北美的汉学在近代研... 选题非常的有意思,主要讨论晚明和晚清两个时代的艳诗风潮,作者将其视为一种反主流的诗学思想以及对西方浪漫文化的对抗(或者也可以说整合)。其实看到作者提到黄景仁,我本来是希望看到一些关于盛清时代的艳诗讨论的,除却黄景仁,作者也提到过随园及其背后代表的性灵风尚,可惜这一段略显薄弱,其实袁枚作为一个以自身好恶为诗学审美标准的人,他的艳诗应当也是很值得大量讨论的。最后依然跟现代性扯上关系,北美的汉学在近代研究除了疯狂挖掘现代性,还有没有其他可以讨论的东西呢? (展开)