The Poetics of Decadence: Chinese Poetry of the Southern Dynasties and Late Tang Periods
This intertextual study of decadent (tuifei) poetry demystifies it by using tuifei as a critical term and by situating it within a conventional system of signs. The Poetics of Decadence focuses on four major poets during the Southern Dynasties (420-869) and Late Tang Periods (826-904) when decadent poetry was produced in great quantity, namely Xiao Gang, Li He, Wen Tingyun, and Li Shangyin. The author argues that decadent poetry challenged the canonical concept and practice of poetry as established by "The Great Preface" to The Book of Songs and by the poetry of the Han, Wei, and Jin periods. In so doing, decadent poetry formed a poetic genre with a unique, complex, and self-reflexive verbal system.

The rich and complex nature of decadent poetry gives it remarkable resilience in the face of violent condemnation by traditional criticism and allows its successful negotiation with and integration into the canonical tradition. Decadent poetry is not a marginal trend as it has been commonly perceived, but rather a vital part of the Chinese poetic tradition.
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The Poetics of Decadence: Chinese Poetry of the Southern Dynasties and Late Tang Periods
This intertextual study of decadent (tuifei) poetry demystifies it by using tuifei as a critical term and by situating it within a conventional system of signs. The Poetics of Decadence focuses on four major poets during the Southern Dynasties (420-869) and Late Tang Periods (826-904) when decadent poetry was produced in great quantity, namely Xiao Gang, Li He, Wen Tingyun, and Li Shangyin. The author argues that decadent poetry challenged the canonical concept and practice of poetry as established by "The Great Preface" to The Book of Songs and by the poetry of the Han, Wei, and Jin periods. In so doing, decadent poetry formed a poetic genre with a unique, complex, and self-reflexive verbal system.

The rich and complex nature of decadent poetry gives it remarkable resilience in the face of violent condemnation by traditional criticism and allows its successful negotiation with and integration into the canonical tradition. Decadent poetry is not a marginal trend as it has been commonly perceived, but rather a vital part of the Chinese poetic tradition.
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The Poetics of Decadence: Chinese Poetry of the Southern Dynasties and Late Tang Periods

The Poetics of Decadence: Chinese Poetry of the Southern Dynasties and Late Tang Periods

by Fusheng Wu
The Poetics of Decadence: Chinese Poetry of the Southern Dynasties and Late Tang Periods

The Poetics of Decadence: Chinese Poetry of the Southern Dynasties and Late Tang Periods

by Fusheng Wu

eBook

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Overview

This intertextual study of decadent (tuifei) poetry demystifies it by using tuifei as a critical term and by situating it within a conventional system of signs. The Poetics of Decadence focuses on four major poets during the Southern Dynasties (420-869) and Late Tang Periods (826-904) when decadent poetry was produced in great quantity, namely Xiao Gang, Li He, Wen Tingyun, and Li Shangyin. The author argues that decadent poetry challenged the canonical concept and practice of poetry as established by "The Great Preface" to The Book of Songs and by the poetry of the Han, Wei, and Jin periods. In so doing, decadent poetry formed a poetic genre with a unique, complex, and self-reflexive verbal system.

The rich and complex nature of decadent poetry gives it remarkable resilience in the face of violent condemnation by traditional criticism and allows its successful negotiation with and integration into the canonical tradition. Decadent poetry is not a marginal trend as it has been commonly perceived, but rather a vital part of the Chinese poetic tradition.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781438424507
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Publication date: 04/30/1998
Series: SUNY series in Chinese Philosophy and Culture
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 277
File size: 9 MB

About the Author

Fusheng Wu is Assistant Professor of Languages and Literature at the University of Utah. He is co-translator of Songs of My Heart: The Chinese Lyric Poetry of Ruan Ji.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction

1. Defining Decadence in the Chinese Poetic Tradition

2. Xiao Gang and Palace Style Poetry

3. Li He: The Poetry of Beautiful Women and Ghastly Ghosts

4. Wen Tingyun: The Poet Dandy

5. Li Shangyin: Negotiation with Tradition

Conclusion

Notes

Selected Bibliography

Index
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