Songs from Xanadu : studies in Mongol-dynasty song-poetry (san-chʿü)
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Songs from Xanadu : studies in Mongol-dynasty song-poetry (san-chʿü)
(Michigan monographs in Chinese studies, no. 47)
Center for Chinese Studies, University of Michigan, 1983
- pbk.
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Library, Institute of Developing Economies, Japan External Trade Organization遡
pbk.||951.7||M213390372
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Note
Title on page facing t.p.: Shang-tu yüeh fu
Bibliography: p. 223-227
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Crump presents the genre of san-ch'ü poetry in a lively and entertaining manner. Song-Poems begins with a brief survey of the origins of the genre and of its metrical intricacies and poetic conventions. Then, translating poems ranging from the Rabelaisian to the sublime, Crump explores its favorite themes: human absurdity, the poignant and comic aspects of love and desire, the futility of ambition, and the joys of rustic life.
Interweaving lively translations of one hundred and twenty poems with discussion of their social and literary context, Song-Poems from Xanadu is a succinct introduction to the special pleasures of these lyrics from the age of Kublai Khan.
The Chinese texts of all poems are included along with notes, appendixes, bibliography, and character index.
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