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Book Cover
E-book
Author Idema, W. L. (Wilt L.)

Title The Resurrected Skeleton : from Zhuangzi to Lu Xun / Wilt L. Idema
Published New York : Columbia University Press, [2014]

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Description 1 online resource
Series Translations from the Asian classics
Translations from the Asian classics.
Contents Master Zhuang sighs over the skeleton in Northern and Southern lyrics and songs, parts 1 and 2 / Du Hui -- Master Zhuang lamenting the skeleton / Ding Yaokang -- Free and easy roaming / Wang Yinglin -- The butterfly dream / Chunshuzhai -- The precious scroll of Master Zhuang's Butterfly dream and Skeleton -- "Raising the dead" / Lu Xun
Summary The early Chinese text Master Zhuang (Zhuangzi) is well known for its relativistic philosophy and colorful anecdotes. In the work, Zhuang Zhou ca. 300 B.C.E.) dreams that he is a butterfly and wonders, upon awaking, if he in fact dreamed that he was a butterfly or if the butterfly is now dreaming that it is Zhuang Zhou. The text also recounts Master Zhuang's encounter with a skull, which praises the pleasures of death over the toil of living. This anecdote became popular with Chinese poets of the second and third century C.E. and found renewed significance with the founders of Quanzhen Daoism in the twelfth century. The Quanzhen masters transformed the skull into a skeleton and treated the object as a metonym for death and a symbol of the refusal of enlightenment. Later preachers made further revisions, adding Master Zhuang's resurrection of the skeleton, a series of accusations made by the skeleton against the philosopher, and the enlightenment of the magistrate who judges their case. The legend of the skeleton was widely popular throughout the Ming dynasty (1368-1644), and the fiction writer Lu Xun (1881-1936) reimagined it in the modern era. The first book in English to trace the development of the legend and its relationship to centuries of change in Chinese philosophy and culture, The Resurrected Skeleton translates and contextualizes the story's major adaptations and draws parallels with the Muslim legend of Jesus's encounter with a skull and the European tradition of the Dance of Death. Translated works include versions of the legend in the form of popular ballads and plays, together with Lu Xun's short story of the 1930s, underlining the continuity between traditional and modern Chinese culture
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Zhuangzi -- In literature
SUBJECT Zhuangzi fast
Zhuangzi v365-v290 Zhuangzi gnd
Subject Chinese literature -- History and criticism
Resurrection in literature.
LITERARY CRITICISM -- Asian -- General.
RELIGION -- Taoism.
Chinese literature
Literature
Resurrection in literature
Rezeption
Skelett
Tod
Genre/Form Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Form Electronic book
ISBN 0231536518
9780231536516