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Playwrights and Literary Games in Seventeenth-Century China - Plays by Tang Xianzu, Mei Dingzuo, Wu Bing, Li Yu, and Kong Shangren (Hardcover)
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Playwrights and Literary Games in Seventeenth-Century China - Plays by Tang Xianzu, Mei Dingzuo, Wu Bing, Li Yu, and Kong Shangren (Hardcover)
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Playwrights and Literary Games in Seventeenth-Century China: Plays
by Tang Xianzu, Mei Dingzuo, Wu Bing, Li Yu, and Kong Shangren is a
full-length study of chuanqi (romance) drama, a sophisticated form
with substantial literary and meta-theatrical value that reigned in
Chinese theater from the sixteenth to eighteenth centuries and
nourished later theatrical traditions including jingju (Beijing
Opera). Highly educated dramatists used chuanqi to present in
artistic form personal, social, and political concerns of their
time. There were six outstanding examples of these trends,
considered masterpieces in their time and ever since. This study
presents them in their social and cultural context during the long
seventeenth century (1580 1700), the period of great
experimentation and political transition. The romantic spirit and
independent thinking of the late Ming elite stimulated the
efflorescence of the chuanqi, and that legacy was inherited and
investigated during the second half of the seventeenth-century in
early Qing. Jing Shen examinees the texts to demonstrate that the
playwrights appropriate, convert, or misinterpret other genres or
literary works of enduring influence into their plays to convey
subtle and subversive expressions in the fine margins between
tradition and innovation, history and theatrical re-presentation.
By exploring the components of romance in texts from late Ming to
early Qing, Shen reveals creative readings of earlier themes,
stories, plays and the changing idea of romanticism for chuanqi
drama. This study also shows the engagement of literati playwrights
in closed literary circles in which chuanqi plays became a tool by
which literati playwrights negotiated their agency and social
stature. The five playwrights whose works are analyzed in this book
had different experiences pursuing government service as
scholar-officials; some failed to achieve high office. But their
common concerns and self-conscious literary choices reveal
important in
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