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Just a Song

Stephen Owen

Chinese Lyrics from the Eleventh and Early Twelfth Centuries

Barcode 9780674987128
Hardback

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Original price
£37.93
£37.93 - £37.93
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Release Date: 01/03/2019

Genre: Poetry & Drama
Sub-Genre: Literary Criticism
Label: Harvard University Press
Series: Harvard-Yenching Institute Monograph Series
Language: English
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Pages: 430

Chinese Lyrics from the Eleventh and Early Twelfth Centuries
“Song Lyric,” ci, is one of the most loved forms of Chinese poetry, radically distinct from “Classical Poetry,” shi. Stephen Owen examines song lyric’s literary traditions, including its origins, major writers and collections, and development into a genre, while offering a new hypothesis on the relationship between song practice and written text.

“Song Lyric,” ci, remains one of the most loved forms of Chinese poetry. From the early eleventh century through the first quarter of the twelfth century, song lyric evolved from an impromptu contribution in a performance practice to a full literary genre, in which the text might be read more often than performed. Young women singers, either indentured or private entrepreneurs, were at the heart of song practice throughout the period; the authors of the lyrics were notionally mostly male. A strange gender dynamic arose, in which men often wrote in the voice of a woman and her imagined feelings, then appropriated that sensibility for themselves.

As an essential part of becoming literature, a history was constructed for the new genre. At the same time the genre claimed a new set of aesthetic values to radically distinguish it from older “Classical Poetry,” shi. In a world that was either pragmatic or moralizing (or both), song lyric was a discourse of sensibility, which literally gave a beautiful voice to everything that seemed increasingly to be disappearing in the new Song dynasty world of righteousness and public advancement.