Caizi jiaren

Caizi jiaren (Chinese: 才子佳人; pinyin: Cáizǐjiārén; Wade–Giles: Ts'ai-tzu chia-jen; "Scholar and Beauty" or "Scholar-Beauty"[1][2]) is a genre of Chinese fiction typically involving a romance between a young scholar and a beautiful girl. They were highly popular during the late Ming Dynasty and early Qing Dynasty.[3]

History

Three Tang Dynasty works particularly influential in the development of the caizi-jiaren model" were Yingying's Biography, The Tale of Li Wa, and Huo Xiaoyu zhuan (T: 霍小玉傳, S: 霍小玉传, "The story of Huo Xiaoyu"). Song Geng writes that Iu-kiao-li: or, the Two Fair Cousins was "one of the best-known caizi-jiaren novels."[4] Chloë F. Starr adds that among the best known were Yu jiao li, Ping Shan Leng Yan, and Haoqiu zhuan.[3][5]

Early examples are also common in Ming and Qing dynasty opera, such as The Story of the Western Wing, which uses the term caizi jiaren in its text, and The Peony Pavilion. In both of these operas lovers elope, have secret trysts, or were perfect matches in spite of parental disapproval. But the genre finally achieved an independent cultural and historical identity in the early Qing, when a writers began to use the term caizi jiaren for a group of vernacular novels with twenty or so chapters which had formulaic or standard characters and plots. The mid-18th century novel Dream of the Red Chamber criticized them, and literati dismissed them as inferior and obscene. By the 18th century, the genre had developed variety as the scholar and the beauty shared the action with fantasy and various other elements (such as judges and courtroom, monks and nuns, brothels, and illicit assignations, etc.).[6]

Plot characteristics

Hu Wanchuan (T: 胡萬川, S: 胡万川, P: Hú Wànchuān) writes that the typical caizi jiaren plot is a love story between a beautiful girl and a handsome scholar, both of whose families are socially distinguished and both of whom have an aptitude for poetry and prose. Usually each of the protagonists is an only child and oftentimes at least one parent is dead.[4] Song Geng comments that by having one or more of the parents dead, the number of characters is reduced and "this plotline may also serve to emphasize the extraordinary value and peerless perfection of the scholar and beauty."[4]

The story, Hu Wanchuan continues, characteristically opens with an unexpected meeting between the two and love at first sight. The woman often has a female servant who serves as a matchmaker and mediates between the lovers. The plot then deals with obstacles to the marriage; these obstacles often consist of the scholar not having an official rank and the father or mother of the girl opposing the marriage. Often the story ends when the young scholar passes the imperial examinations and the couple is united.[4] Most caizi jiaren stories have happy endings.[7]

Keith McMahon comments that the lovers in caizi jiaren stories of the early Qing "are like stereotyped opposites of the characters in earlier works." The love of the scholar and the beauty "sharply contrasts" with depictions in late Ming fiction, where love is erotic rather than spiritual. In the caizi jiaren novel "sentiment replaces libido" and "refined, internal feelings replace vulgar, external sensations."[8]

One characteristic of the early Qing works is the mutual respect between the sexes. The men do not condescend to the women, and in many cases the talented and independent woman is the equal of her male lover. Since she is often an only child who has been cherished and educated by her father as if she were a boy, she skillfully helps her father and lover out of difficulty. She sometimes even dresses as a male. One beauty states her motto as “though in body I am a woman, in ambition I surpass men” and one father says of such a daughter that she is worth ten sons. Their roles and personalities are so similar that in many instances the woman dresses as a man. Yet the relation is not entirely equal. To dress as a male, for instance, represents upward mobility, but there are few instances of men dressing as women except to seduce women or to seek homosexual encounters. Nor is there necessarily equality in the number of partners, since in a number of later novels the man takes more than one wife or has a series of lovers. In the end, what the beauty wants is to choose a man who is worthy of her.[9]

Characters

In addition to physical beauty, the two main characters both (especially the girl) also possess many other positive characteristics, such as literary talent, noble birth, virtue, and chastity.[4] The preface of Iu-kiao-li: or, the Two Fair Cousins (Yu Jiao Li) states that "The young man is as beautiful as the girl while the girl is as brilliant as the young man" (C: 郎兼女色,女擅郎才).[4]

Pseudo-caizi, who pretend to be caizi, are foils to the real caizi in caizi jiaren stories.[10]

Influence

Song wrote that while Dream of the Red Chamber (Honglou meng) "cannot be regarded as a caizi-jiaren novel as such, there is little controversy about the influence of the caizi-jiaren characterization and theme on it."[11] Robert E. Hegel, author of a book review of The Chinese Novel at the Turn of the Century, wrote that Jean Duval's description of The Nine-tailed Turtle "makes the novel seem indebted to Haoqiu zhuan 好逑傳 and perhaps other works of the earlier caizi jiaren romantic tradition".[12] Robert E. Hegel stated that The Carnal Prayer Mat (Rou putuan) was intended to satirize the imperial examination system and parody the patterns in caizi jiaren novels.[11]

Reception

Starr wrote that the novels of the genre "encountered a critical silence similar to that occluding red-light novels, though for apparently more 'objective' aesthetic reasons, after the genre was dismissed for its lack of imagination."[3]

References

Notes

  1. Zito, Angela; Barlow, Tani E. (1994). Body, Subject, and Power in China. University of Chicago Press. p. 232.
  2. Santangelo, Paolo (2006). From Skin to Heart: Perceptions of Emotions and Bodily Sensations in Traditional Chinese Culture. Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. p. 205.
  3. 1 2 3 Starr, p. 40.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Song, p. 20.
  5. Song, Geng, p. 23-24
  6. McMahon (1994), pp. 231-233.
  7. Huang, Martin W., p. 215.
  8. McMahon (1988), p. 131-132.
  9. McMahon (1994), p. 233- 235.
  10. Song, Geng, p. 203
  11. 1 2 Song, p. 34.
  12. Hegel, p. 91.

Further reading

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