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Writing Women in Late Imperial China

Chang, Kang-i Sun(Edited by)Widmer, Ellen(Edited by)
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Until recently only a handful of women writers were thought to have existed in traditional China, but new scholarship has called attention to several hundred whose works have survived.

Coming from the fields of literature, history, art history, and comparative literature, the fourteen contributors to this volume apply a range of methodologies to this new material and to other sources concerning women writers in China from 1600 to 1900.

An opening section on courtesans details the lives of individual women and their male admirers contemporary and subsequent who imposed an array of meaning on the category of woman writer.

The works treated in this section are mainly poetry, although drama also enters in.

The second section focuses on the writings of gentrywomen who, confined to the inner quarters of their residences, turned out a body of poetry impressive both for its volume and for the number of authors involved.

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Product Details
Stanford University Press
0804728720 / 9780804728720
Paperback / softback
01/04/1997
United States
English
558p. : ill.
23 cm
postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More