Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 14-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

Evolution of Ci Poetry of the dynasties of Tang and Song in the perspective of dissociation and integration of Shi and Ci

Evolution of Ci Poetry of the dynasties of Tang and Song in the perspective of dissociation and... The development of Chinese literary genres is largely a history of dissociation and integration. Ci and Shi are closely associated at all times, separated at one time, and fused with each other at others. A brief survey of dissociation and integration of Ci and Shi falls into four periods: 1) starting from the early to the mid-late Tang Dynasty (Tang Chao 唐朝 CE 618–907), when Ci was derived from Shi and no distinction existed between the two; 2) the late Tang Dynasty and the following Five Dynasties (Wu Dai 五代 CE 907–960), during which Ci was separated and known from shi ; 3) the Northern Song Dynasty (Bei Song 北宋 CE 960–1127), when Ci developed and experienced a transform and took an initial inosculation into shi ; and 4) the Southern Song Dynasty (Nan Song 南宋 CE 1127–1279), when Ci was shifted completely to Shi (poetry) and the two were thoroughly merged. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Frontiers of Literary Studies in China Brill

Evolution of Ci Poetry of the dynasties of Tang and Song in the perspective of dissociation and integration of Shi and Ci

Frontiers of Literary Studies in China , Volume 1 (3): 449 – Jan 1, 2007

Loading next page...
 
/lp/brill/evolution-of-ci-poetry-of-the-dynasties-of-tang-and-song-in-the-Zsxp20hF9L

References (33)

Publisher
Brill
Copyright
Copyright 2007 by Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands
ISSN
1673-7318
eISSN
1673-7423
DOI
10.1007/s11702-007-0021-7
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

The development of Chinese literary genres is largely a history of dissociation and integration. Ci and Shi are closely associated at all times, separated at one time, and fused with each other at others. A brief survey of dissociation and integration of Ci and Shi falls into four periods: 1) starting from the early to the mid-late Tang Dynasty (Tang Chao 唐朝 CE 618–907), when Ci was derived from Shi and no distinction existed between the two; 2) the late Tang Dynasty and the following Five Dynasties (Wu Dai 五代 CE 907–960), during which Ci was separated and known from shi ; 3) the Northern Song Dynasty (Bei Song 北宋 CE 960–1127), when Ci developed and experienced a transform and took an initial inosculation into shi ; and 4) the Southern Song Dynasty (Nan Song 南宋 CE 1127–1279), when Ci was shifted completely to Shi (poetry) and the two were thoroughly merged.

Journal

Frontiers of Literary Studies in ChinaBrill

Published: Jan 1, 2007

Keywords: ancient Chinese literature; shi and Ci of the Tang and Song Dynasties; dissociation and integration; development of Chinese literary genres

There are no references for this article.