Fu (poetry)
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Song dynasty painting of a Han dynasty literary gathering at the court of Liu Wu, Prince of Liang (c. 150 BC) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Fu (Chinese: 賦), variously translated as rhapsody or poetic exposition, is a form of Chinese rhymed prose that was the dominant literary form during the Han dynasty (206 BC – AD 220). Fu are intermediary pieces between poetry and prose in which an object, feeling, or subject is described and rhapsodized in exhaustive detail and from as many angles as possible.[1] Classical fu composers attempted to use as wide a vocabulary as they could, and often included great numbers of rare and archaic terms in their compositions.[2] Fu poems employ alternating rhyme and prose, varying line length, close alliteration, onomatopoeia, loose parallelism, and extensive cataloging of their topics.[3]
Unlike the songs of the Classic of Poetry (Shijing 詩經) or the Verses of Chu (Chu ci 楚辭), fu were meant to be recited aloud or chanted but not sung.[4] The fu genre came into being around the 3rd to 2nd centuries BC and continued to be regularly used into the Song dynasty. Fu were used as grand praises for the imperial courts, palaces, and cities, but were also used to write "fu on things", in which any place, object, or feeling was rhapsodized in exhaustive detail. The largest collections of historical fu are the Selections of Refined Literature (Wen xuan 文選), the Book of Han (Han shu 漢書), the New Songs from the Jade Terrace (Yutai xinyong 玉臺新詠), and official dynastic histories.
There is no counterpart or similar form to the fu genre in Western literature.[5] During a large part of the twentieth century, fu poetry was harshly criticized by Chinese scholars as excessively ornate, lacking in real emotion, and ambiguous in its moral messages.[6] Because of these historical associations, scholarship on fu poetry in China almost ceased entirely between 1949 and the end of the Cultural Revolution in 1976.[7] Since then, study of fu has gradually returned to its previous level.
History
Revolving and rushing, a glistening halo,
front and rear conjoined and connected.
Lofty and lofty, lifted and lifted,
roiling and roiling, raging and raging,
pressing and pressing, climbing and climbing,
a layered fortress of multiplied strength,
doubled and diverse like the lines of troops.
Rumbling and roaring, booming and crashing,
pushing and turning, surging and rolling –
truly, it cannot be withstood!
Origins
The term "fu", when applied to Chinese literature, first appears in the Zhou dynasty (c. 1046 – 221 BC), where it meant "to present", as in poetic recitations.[8] It was also one of the three literary devices traditionally assigned to the songs of the Classic of Poetry (Shijing 詩經).[8] Over the course of the late 1st millennium BC, fu became the name of poetic expositions in which an author or composer created a comprehensive exposition and performed it as a rhapsody.[8] Han dynasty historian Ban Gu in the "Monograph on Arts and Letters" defined fu as "to recite without singing".[9]
Fu poetry is often viewed as a descendant of the Verses of Chu (Chu ci) songs combined with the rhetorical expositions of the Intrigues of the Warring States (Zhanguo ce 戰國策).[2][10] During the golden age of fu in the 2nd century BC, many of the greatest fu composers were from the southwestern area of Shu (modern Sichuan Province).[11] A chapter of Xunzi containing a series of riddles has been theorized to be the earliest known fu.[2] The earliest preserved and definitely datable fu is Jia Yi's "Fu on the Owl" (Fúniǎo fù 鵩鳥賦), composed about 170 BC.[12] Jia's surviving writings mention an earlier fu he wrote upon his exile to Changsha which he modeled upon Qu Yuan's "Encountering Sorrow" (Li Sao 離騷), but it has not survived to the present.
Han dynasty
Much of the surviving Han fu and other poetry survives through Six Dynasty anthologies and other sources, such as quotations embedded in various works.
Western Han
Fu achieved its greatest prominence during the early Han dynasty. Jia Yi's "Fu on the Owl", written around 170 BC, was composed following on the third year of his exile to Changsha, and uses much of the style of the Li Sao and other songs of the Verses of Chu. "Fu on the Owl", besides being the earliest known fu, is unusual in the author's extended use of philosophical reflection upon his own situation in life.[12]
Emperor Wu of Han ascended the throne in 141 BC, and his 54-year reign is considered the golden age of "grand fu" (Chinese: 大賦; pinyin: dàfù).[11] Emperor Wu summoned famous fu writers to the imperial court in Chang'an, where many of them composed and presented fu to the entire court.[11] The earliest grand fu of Emperor Wu's reign is "Seven Stimuli" (Qī fā 七發), by Mei Sheng (枚乘; d. 140 BC).[11] In "Seven Stimuli", Mei Sheng acts as a Warring States-style travelling orator who tries to cure a Chu prince of an illness caused by overindulgence in sensual pleasures by pushing his senses to their limits with his fu descriptions.[3]
In the soil:
- Cinnabar, azurite, ocher, white clay,
- Orpiment, milky quartz,
- Tin, prase, gold, and silver,
- In manifold hues glisten and glitter,
- Shining and sparkling like dragon scales.
Of stones there are:
- Red jade, rose stone,
- Orbed jades, vulcan stone,
- Aculith, dark polishing stone,
- Quartz, and the warrior rock.
Of all the authors from the golden age of "grand fu" composition, Sima Xiangru is generally considered to be the greatest.[12] A native of Chengdu, he was traditionally said to have been summoned to the imperial court after Emperor Wu happened to personally read his "Fu of Sir Vacuous" (Zǐxū fù 子虛賦), though this is almost certainly a story added later.[11] After arriving in the capital around 136 BC, Sima Xiangru expanded his "Fu of Sir Vacuous" into his magnum opus, "Fu on the Imperial Park" (Shànglín fù 上林賦), generally considered the most famous fu of all.[3][12] This work, whose original title was probably "Fu on the Excursion Hunt of the Son of Heaven" (Tiānzǐ yóuliè fù 天子遊獵賦), is a grand celebration of the Emperor's personal hunting park east of Chang'an,[14] and is famed for its rich number of rare and difficult words and characters.[12]
The grand fu of the Western Han dynasty were read and recited as celebrations of pure poetic delight, and were the first pieces of Chinese literature to fuse both unrestrained entertainment and moral admonitions together in single works.[15] However, after the reign of Emperor Wu, his court culture began to be criticized as having placed undue emphasis on the grandiose language in fu and therefore having missed opportunities to encourage moral restraint.[16] The most prominent critic of "grand fu" was the other great fu writer of the Han dynasty: Yang Xiong.[16] As a youth, Yang was an admirer and imitator of Sima Xiangru's fu, but later came to disapprove of grand fu.[16] Yang believed that the original purpose of fu was to "indirectly admonish" (fèng 諷), but that the extended rhetorical arguments and complex vocabulary used in grand fu caused their hearers and readers to marvel at their aesthetic beauty while missing their moral messages.[16] Yang juxtaposed early Han dynasty fu with the fu-like expositions in the Classic of Poetry, saying that while those in the Poetry provided moral standards, the fu of the Han poets "led to excess".[16] While known as one of the fu masters of the Han dynasty, Yang's fu are generally known for their focus on admonishing readers and listeners to uphold moral values.[14]
The august house is resplendent, as if dwelling in Heaven;
from a myriad directions they come, gathering like stars.
The honored and favored fan their fires of lust even hotter;
all guard profit without cease.
When a front coach overturns not far ahead,
the rear teams dash forward, racing to catch up.
They exhaust their multifarious craft on terraces and towers,
while the people dwell in the open, sleep in the wet.
They waste fine grain on birds and beasts,
while those below eat chaff and husks without the kernels.
They grandly bestow liberal generosity on fawning flatterers,
but in impeaching loyal protest, they are swift and sure.
"Fu on Recounting a Journey", Cai Yong (AD 159)[17]
Eastern Han
Two of the most famous fu writers of the Eastern Han period were the polymaths Zhang Heng and Cai Yong. Among Zhang Heng's large corpus of writings are a significant number of fu poems, which are the first to have been written in the shorter style that became typical of post-Han fu.[18] Zhang's earliest known fu is "Fu on the Hot Springs" (Wēnquán fù 溫泉賦), which describes the hot springs at Mount Li (modern Huaqing Pool) which famously later became a favorite of Imperial Concubine Yang during the Tang dynasty.[18] "Fu on the Two Metropolises" (Èr jīng fù 二京賦) is considered Zhang's masterpiece.[19] Zhang spent ten years gathering material for the fu, a response to an earlier fu by Ban Gu that is a poetic comparison between the two capitals of the Han dynasty: Luoyang and Chang'an.[19] Zhang's fu is highly satirical and cleverly mocks many aspects of the Western Han period, including Emperor Wu himself[20] The piece contains long passages colorfully describing life in the two capitals in great detail, including the entertainment areas.[21]
Cai Yong, like Zhang Heng, was a prolific writer in addition to his mathematical, astronomical, and musical interests.[22] In AD 159, Cai was summoned to Chang'an to perform on the Chinese zither for the imperial court, but became ill shortly before arriving and returned to his home.[22] Cai composed a poetic record of his journey in "Fu on Recounting a Journey" (Shù xíng fù 述行賦), his most well-known fu.[22] In "Fu on Recounting a Journey", Cai cites examples of treacherous and dishonest rulers and officials from Chinese history, then criticizes the eunuchs of the capital for similar crimes.[17]
A marvelous bird from the Western Regions,
manifests a wondrous natural beauty.
It embodies the sublime substance of the metal essence,
embodies the shining brilliance of fire's power.
Gifted with wit and acuity, it is able to speak;
intelligent and bright, it can perceive the imperceptible.
Thus, it plays and sports on lofty peaks,
nests and perches in secluded vales.
Whenever it flies, it does not land at random;
wherever it soars, it is sure to choose a good grove.
It has reddish-black feet, a vermilion beak,
green coat, azure mantle.
Bright and colorful, lovely in appearance,
It chitters and chatters in a lovely voice.
A number of fu writers from the late 2nd and early 3rd centuries AD became considered great fu poets, and were noted for their descriptions of the chaos and destruction following the collapse of the Han dynasty. Wang Can, who lived as a refugee in Chu following the assassination of Dong Zhuo in AD 192, wrote a famous fu entitled "Fu on Climbing the Tower" (Dènglóu fù 登樓賦) in which Wang movingly describes climbing a tower near Jingzhou and gazing longingly in the direction of his home in Luoyang.[24] Poets often used subjects of descriptive fu poems to symbolize themselves, as in "Fu on the Parrot" (Yīngwǔ fù 鸚鵡賦), by Mi Heng, in which Mi uses a caged parrot as an allegory for a scholar whose talents go unrecognized and whose inability to control his tongue results in his captivity.[24] During the Three Kingdoms period, the court of the warlord Cao Cao and his sons Cao Pi and Cao Zhi became a famous literary salon, and a number of fu poems from their court have survived to modern times.
Six Dynasties
During the Six Dynasties period, fu remained a major part of contemporary poetry, although shi poetry was gradually increasing in popularity.[24] Six Dynasties fu are generally much shorter and less extravagant than Han dynasty fu, likely due to a tradition of composing works entirely in parallel couplets that arose during the period.[24] While lyrical fu and "fu on things" had been starkly different forms in the Han dynasty, after the 2nd century AD the distinction mostly disappeared.[24] Although the extravagant fu style of the Han mostly disappeared, "fu on things" continued to be widely written.
Xie Lingyun is one of the best-known poets of the entire Six Dynasties period, second only to Tao Yuanming. In contrast to his older contemporary Tao, Xie is known for the difficult language, dense allusions, and frequent parallelisms of his poetry.[25] Xie's greatest fu is "Fu on Dwelling in the Mountains" (Shān jū fù 山居賦), a Han-style "grand fu" describing Xie's personal estate that borrows its style from the famous "Fu on the Imperial Park" by Sima Xiangru.[26] Like classical Han fu, the poem uses a large number of obscure and rare characters, but "Fu on Dwelling in the Mountains" is unique in that Xie included his own annotations to the poem,[26] without which the poem would be nearly incomprehensible.
During the Liang dynasty, fu continued to be a popular form of literature, though it began to merge with the popular five- and seven-syllable poetry forms, which completely eclipsed fu during the Tang dynasty.[27] Some fu pieces, such as Shen Yue's "Fu on Dwelling in the Suburbs" (Jiāo jū fù 郊居賦)—an homage to Xie Lingyun's "Fu on Dwelling in the Mountains"—followed the traditional forms and subjects of classical fu, but an increasing number did not.[27] "Fu on Lotus-picking" (Cǎi lián fù 採蓮賦), by Xiao Gang (later Emperor Jianwen of Liang), is a short, lyrical fu that mixes freely with popular lyric poetry,[27] and portrayed southern China as a romantic land of pleasure and sensuality.[28] Lotus-picking was an activity traditionally associated with peasant women, but in the early 5th century became a popular topic in fu and poetry.[28]
Yu Xin is generally considered the last great fu poet of Chinese history.[29] Yu, like Yan Zhitui, was born in the south but forced to relocate to northern China after the south's defeat, and spent the rest of his career writing of the loss of the south as a loss of an entire culture and way of life.[30] Yu's most famous piece is "Fu on Lamenting the South" (Āi Jiāngnán fù 哀江南賦), in which he describes his life's experiences in the context of the larger context of the destruction of the south and its culture.[30]
Tang and Song dynasties
The fu genre changed rapidly during the Tang dynasty. During the early Tang, a new form of fu called "regulated fu" (lǜfù 律賦) supplanted the original form.[31] "Regulated fu" had strict rules of form and expression, and required the use of consistent rhymes throughout each piece.[31] Additionally, rules were created to govern the arrangement of tones in each poem, as the introduction of Buddhist texts written in Sanskrit and Pali had stimulated the Chinese to methodical study of their own language and the identification of the four tones of Middle Chinese. Beginning in the Tang dynasty, these "regulated fu" were required for the composition sections of the imperial examinations.[31] Tang writers added new topics to the traditional subjects of fu, such as purely moral topics or scenes from Chinese antiquity.[31] The "parallel fu" (piānfù 駢賦) was another variant of the fu developed in the Tang, and was only used for rhetorical compositions.[32]
In 826, Tang poet Du Mu's poem "Fu on E-pang Palace" (Ēpáng gōng fù 阿房宫賦)[n 1] laid the foundation for a new form of fu called "prose fu" (wénfù 文賦), in which prose is freely rhymed.[32] This form of fu became the dominant fu form during the late Tang and the Song dynasty.[32] By the 9th and 10th centuries, traditional fu had become mainly historical pursuits, and were largely read and copied because of their inclusion on the imperial examinations.[33]
Topics
"Fu on things"
Between 130–100 BC, Emperor Wu greatly expanded China's territory into Central Asia, northern Vietnam, and the Korean Peninsula through a series of military campaigns and invasions.[34] As the expansion progressed, a large number of foreign plants, animals, goods, and rarities were brought to the imperial capital at Chang'an.[34] Throughout the Han dynasty, court officials and poets often composed special fu called "fu on things" (yǒngwù fù 詠物賦) on these new and unusual things, in which they described and catalogued extensively.[35] These "fu on things" became a major genre in fu poetry, and cover a vast number of instruments, objects, and phenomena.
Ban Zhao, one of the most famous female poets of Chinese history, wrote a well-known fu during the reign of Emperor He of Han entitled "Fu on the Great Bird" (Dà què fù 大雀賦), believed to be a description of an ostrich brought to the Han court from Parthia around AD 110.[36] Scholar Ma Rong wrote two well-known fu on ancient board games: his "Fu on Chaupar" (Chūpú fù 樗蒲賦), which the Chinese believed to actually have been invented by Laozi after he departed west out of China, and his "Fu on Encirclement Chess" (Wěiqí fù 圍棋賦), one of the earliest known descriptions of the game Go.[37] Han dynasty librarian Wang Yi, best known as the compiler of the received version of the Verses of Chu, wrote several object-description fu in the early 2nd century AD, such as "Fu on the Lychee" (Lìzhī fù 荔枝賦), the earliest known poetic description of the lychee fruit.[38]
"Now, as the time of darkness reaches its peak,
And harsh air is ascendant,
Scorching Creek dries up,
Scalding Vale freezes,
Fire wells are extinguished,
hot springs ice over,
Frothing pools no longer bubble,
fiery winds do not rise.
On north-facing doors, panels are plastered;
in the land of the naked, men drape themselves in silk.
And then, clouds rise on river and sea;
sand flies on northern deserts.
Unbroken vapors, piled up haze,
shroud the Sun, veil the clouds.
First sleet comes pattering down;
then snow, copiously cluttered, falls harder and harder."
The literary salon of Cao Pi's court produced a number of notable "fu on things" in which a group of poets known as the Seven Masters of the Jian'an period each composed their own version of the fu. During this period, Cao Pi was once presented with a large agate of unusual quality which Cao had made into a bridle.[40] Each of the men composed their own "Fu on the Agate Bridle" (Mǎnǎo lè fù 瑪瑙勒賦) for the occasion.[40] Another object-description fu from the Cao court is "Fu on the Musāragalva Bowl" (Chēqú wǎn fù 硨磲碗賦),[n 2] which was a bowl made of a coral- or shell-like substance from somewhere near India, which was then known as the "Western Regions".[40]
One of poet Shu Xi's (束皙; AD 263–302) fu has become well known in the history of Chinese cuisine: his "Fu on Pasta" (Bǐng fù 餅賦) is an encyclopedic description of a wide variety of dough-based foods, including noodles, steamed buns, and dumplings,[41] which had not yet become the traditional Chinese foods they are in modern times. Western Jin poet Fu Xian's "Fu on Paper" (Zhǐ fù 紙賦) is well known as an early description of writing paper, which had only been invented about 150 years earlier.[42]
Sociopolitical protest
Part of the legacy associated with the fu is its use as a form of sociopolitical protest, such as the theme of the loyal minister who has been unjustly exiled by the ruler or those in power at the court, rather than receiving the promotion and respect which he truly deserves. In the Verses of Chu, one of the works attributed to Qu Yuan is the "Li Sao", which is one of the earliest known works in this tradition, both as ancestral[43] to the fu as well as its incorporation of political criticism as a theme of poetry.[44] The theme of unjust exile is related to the development of Xiaoxiang poetry, or the poetry stylistically or thematically based upon lamenting the unjust exile of the poet, either directly, or allegorically through the use of the persona of a friend or historical figure (a safer course in the case of a poet-official who might be punished for any too blatant criticism of the current emperor).[45] During the Han Dynasty, along with the development of the fu stylistically, the idea that it incorporate political criticism through indirection and allegory also developed. Han Dynasty historian and author Ban Gu in his Book of Han pointedly refers to a fu by Qu Yuan as a literary example of the use of the theme of the loyal minister who has been unjustly exiled, rather than receiving the promotion and respect which he truly deserves. As Hellmut Wilhelm puts it: "...the Han fu can easily be classified into a limited number of types. All types have one feature in common: almost without exception they can be and have been interpreted as voicing criticism—either of the ruler, the ruler's behavior, or certain political acts or plans of the ruler; or of the court officials or the ruler's favorites; or, generally, of the lack of discrimination in the employment of officials. The few examples that are positive in tone recommend the authors or their peers for employment, or even contain specific political suggestions. In short, almost all fu have a political purport, and, in addition, almost all of them deal with the relationship between the ruler and his officials."[46] Seen in context, Ban Gu's discussion of Qu Yuan and the Chu sao style is less to the point of the actual evolutionary path of the fu and more to the point that the main purpose of the fu is political and social criticism through poetic indirection: thus, in fu, paradoxically, the "fantastic descriptions and an overflowing rhetoric...can be reduced to...restraint", as the sociopolitical criticism which was key to the fu was constrained within a very subtle, elaborately indirect, occasional, and allusive mode.[47]
Collections
Fu pieces comprise the first main category in the Wen Xuan (Selections of Refined Literature), an early Chinese literary anthology which is still extant.[48] The Selections collects all known fu pieces from the early Han dynasty to its compilation in the 6th century AD, during the Liang dynasty; it has since been the traditional source for studying classical fu.
In the late 17th and early 18th centuries, during the reign of the Kangxi Emperor, scholar Chen Yuanlong (1652–1736) compiled a collection of all known fu extant in his day, publishing his collection in 1706 as Collection of Fu Through the Ages (Lìdài fù huì 歷代賦彙). Chen's Collection in total contains 4,155 fu.
See also
Notes
- ↑ Although The Cambridge History of Chinese Literature, vol. 1, p. 350, gives the name of the palace as "Apang", most scholarly dictionaries read the first character 阿 as ē, not ā, in this case.
- ↑ The Cambridge History of Chinese Literature, vol 1, p. 170, gives the pinyin transliteration of "Fu on the Musāragalva Bowl" as Jūqú wǎn fù, using an alternate reading of the character 車/硨. The Guangyun and most modern scholarly dictionaries give chē, not jū.
Footnotes
- ↑ Cao & Knechtges (2010), p. 317.
- 1 2 3 Idema & Haft (1997), p. 97.
- 1 2 3 4 Kern (2010), p. 91.
- ↑ Book of Han cited in Kern (2010), p. 88.
- ↑ Gong (1997), p. 3.
- ↑ Gong (1997), p. 5.
- ↑ Gong (1997), p. 5-10.
- 1 2 3 Kern (2010), p. 88.
- ↑ Chinese: “不歌而誦謂賦”; pinyin: "Bù gē ér sòng wèi fù", cited in Kern (2010), p. 88.
- ↑ Ho (1986), p. 388.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Kern (2010), p. 90.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Idema & Haft (1997), p. 98.
- ↑ Gong (1997), p. 11.
- 1 2 Kern (2010), p. 89.
- ↑ Kern (2010), pp. 92-93.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Kern (2010), p. 93.
- 1 2 Knechtges (2010), p. 157.
- 1 2 Knechtges (2010), p. 143.
- 1 2 Knechtges (2010), p. 144.
- ↑ Knechtges (2010), p. 144-145.
- ↑ Knechtges (2010), p. 145.
- 1 2 3 Knechtges (2010), p. 156.
- ↑ Knechtges (1996), p. 51.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Idema & Haft (1997), p. 109.
- ↑ Tian (2010), p. 235.
- 1 2 Tian (2010), p. 232.
- 1 2 3 Tian (2010), p. 264.
- 1 2 Tian (2010), p. 267.
- ↑ Idema & Haft (1997), p. 110.
- 1 2 Tian (2010), p. 270.
- 1 2 3 4 Owen (2010), p. 289.
- 1 2 3 Owen (2010), p. 350.
- ↑ Owen (2010), p. 361.
- 1 2 Kern (2010), p. 95.
- ↑ Knechtges (2010), p. 118.
- ↑ Kern (2010), p. 129.
- ↑ Knechtges (2010), p. 149.
- ↑ Knechtges (2010), p. 150.
- ↑ Knechtges (1996), p. 23-25.
- 1 2 3 Knechtges (2010), p. 170.
- ↑ Knechtges (2010), p. 194.
- ↑ Knechtges (2010), p. 193.
- ↑ At least according to some Chinese literary historians. See: Hawkes (2011 [1985]): 221.
- ↑ Davis (1990), p. xlvi-xlvii.
- ↑ Davis (1990): xlviii
- ↑ Wilhelm (1967 [1957]): 311.
- ↑ Wilhelm (1967 [1957]): 312-314, quoting Sima Qian on Sima Xiangru.
- ↑ Tian (2010), p. 255.
Works cited
- Cao, Daoheng 曹道衡; Knechtges, David R. (2010). "Han Fu 賦 (Fu of the Han)". In Knechtges, David R.; Chang, Taiping. Ancient and Early Medieval Chinese Literature: A Reference Guide, Part One. Leiden: Brill. pp. 317–333. ISBN 978-90-04-19127-3.
- Davis, A. R. (1990). The Penguin Book of Chinese Verse. Baltimore: Penguin Books.
- Gong, Kechang 龔克昌 (1997). Studies on the Han Fu (Han fu yanjiu 漢賦研究). Translated by David R. Knechtges. New Haven: American Oriental Society.
- Hawkes, David (1985). The Songs of the South. London: Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-044375-2.
- Ho, Kenneth Pui-hung 何沛雄 (1986). "Fu 賦". In Nienhauser, William. The Indiana Companion to Traditional Chinese Literature (2nd revised ed.). Bloomington: Indiana University Press. pp. 388–391. ISBN 0-253-32983-3.
- Idema, Wilt; Haft, Lloyd (1997). A Guide to Chinese Literature. Ann Arbor: Center for Chinese Studies, University of Michigan. ISBN 0-89264-123-1.
- Kern, Martin (2010). "Early Chinese literature, Beginnings through Western Han". In Owen, Stephen. The Cambridge History of Chinese Literature, Volume 1: To 1375. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 1–115. ISBN 978-0-521-11677-0.
- Knechtges, David R. (1996). Wen Xuan, or Selections of Refined Literature, Volume Three: Rhapsodies on Natural Phenomena, Birds and Animals, Aspirations and Feelings, Sorrowful Laments, Literature, Music, and Passions. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691021260.
- ——— (2010). "From the Eastern Han through the Western Jin (AD 25–317)". In Owen, Stephen. The Cambridge History of Chinese Literature, Volume 1: To 1375. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 116–198. ISBN 978-0-521-11677-0.
- Owen, Stephen (2010). "The Cultural Tang (650–1020)". In Owen, Stephen. The Cambridge History of Chinese Literature, Volume 1: To 1375. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 286–380. ISBN 978-0-521-11677-0.
- Tian, Xiaofei 田晓菲 (2010). "From the Eastern Jin through the early Tang (317–649)". In Owen, Stephen. The Cambridge History of Chinese Literature, Volume 1: To 1375. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 199–285. ISBN 978-0-521-11677-0.
- Wilhelm, Hellmut (1967 [1957]). "The Scholar's Frustration: Notes on a Type of Fu", in Chinese Thought and Institutions, John K. Fairbank, editor. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press.
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