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The End of the Chinese 'Middle Ages: Essays in Mid-Tang Literary Culture
 
 
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The End of the Chinese 'Middle Ages: Essays in Mid-Tang Literary Culture [Paperback]

Stephen Owen (Author)

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Book Description

July 1, 1996 0804726671 978-0804726672 1
This book explores, through a series of essays, a set of interrelated elements that define the literary culture of China in the late eighth and early ninth centuries. This period, known as the Mid-Tang, broke with many of the intellectual habits of the “middle period” of Chinese culture and adumbrated many of the characteristics of China in the Song and later periods.

The first essay examines “singularity,” representations of identity as an assertion of superiority over others and as an alienation that brings rejection by others. The second essay addresses different ways of representing landscapes, showing the ways in which the underlying order of nature had become a problem in the Mid-Tang. The third essay discusses the tendency to offer hypothetical explanations for phenomena that either run contrary to received wisdom or try to account for situations usually thought not to require explanation. When carried out at the level of pure play, such subjective acts of interpretation are wit, and the fourth essay analyzes playfully inflated interpretations of domestic spaces and leisure activities as a discourse of private valuation, articulated against commonsense values.


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This book explores, through a series of essays, a set of interrelated elements that define the literary culture of China in the late eighth and early ninth centuries. This period, known as the Mid-Tang, broke with many of the intellectual habits of the “middle period” of Chinese culture and adumbrated many of the characteristics of China in the Song and later periods.
The first essay examines “singularity,” representations of identity as an assertion of superiority over others and as an alienation that brings rejection by others. The second essay addresses different ways of representing landscapes, showing the ways in which the underlying order of nature had become a problem in the Mid-Tang. The third essay discusses the tendency to offer hypothetical explanations for phenomena that either run contrary to received wisdom or try to account for situations usually thought not to require explanation. When carried out at the level of pure play, such subjective acts of interpretation are wit, and the fourth essay analyzes playfully inflated interpretations of domestic spaces and leisure activities as a discourse of private valuation, articulated against commonsense values.

About the Author

Stephen Owen is Irving Babbitt Professor of Comparative Literature and Professor of Chinese at Harvard University. He is the author of several books, most recently Mi-lou: Poetry and the Labyrinth of Desire.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The assumption of an intense relation between verbal representations and the political or social order is one of the most striking characteristics of imperial Chinese civilization. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
spring verse, apricot buds, purposive order, pond grow, bewitching beauty, poetic scene, romantic commitment, singular style, romance narrative, poetic craft, maternal cousin, financial dependency
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Han Yu, Bai Juyi, Huo Xiaoyu, Liu Zongyuan, Meng Jiao, South Mountains, Yuan Zhen, Jia Dao, Yingying's Story, Xie Lingyun, Little Stone Ramparts Mountain, Liu Yuxi, Princess Taiping, Madame Zheng, South of the City, Zhong Rong, Bao Jiao, Son of Heaven, Wang Fuzhi, Yan Hui, Cui Yingying, Dai Shulun, Deng Tuzi, Gumu Hill, High Tang
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