Pauline Yu, Peter Bol, Stephen Owen, and Willard Peterson, editors
Ways with Words
Writing about Reading Texts from Early China
292 pages, 6 x 9 inches, 6 b/w photographs
September 2000, Available worldwide
Categories: Literary Studies; China; Asian History; Asian Literature
September 2000, Available worldwide
Categories: Literary Studies; China; Asian History; Asian Literature
"Ways with Words offers a lively interdisciplinary discussion to help readers reflect on interpretive practices and appreciate the diversity of Chinese literary and intellectual-historical traditions." —Journal of Asian Studies
Ways with Words presents interpretive essays by scholars from different disciplines on seven core, premodern classical Chinese texts. The remarkable diversity of these works--drawn from literature, philosophy, religion, and art history--challenges the presumption of a monolithic Chinese tradition that has been promoted by scholars and popular culture alike, both in China and the West.
The texts themselves include a poem from the Classic of Poetry compiled in the sixth century b.c.e.; passages from Mencius and Zhuangzi; the Heart Sutra; a poem by Du Fu and the Biography of Yingying by Yuan Zhen, both written during the Tang dynasty; and Notes on the Method for the Brush, a tenth-century text attributed to Jing Hao. Both the original Chinese versions and the translations are provided for each primary text. There are at least two essays--when possible from scholars in different fields--on each work. The volume as a whole demonstrates the various ways in which the modern Western reader can confront the impressive variety of texts from the classical Chinese tradition.















