x_los: (Default)
[personal profile] x_los posting in [community profile] dankodes
This week we continue working with Li Qingzhao’s ci poetry. As usual, the book is freely available via De Gruyter's Library of Chinese Humanities in Mandarin and English and via several publication formats, including two open access options (the pdf appears to be better formatted than the ebook). We're reading the poems 3.9 through 3.16 inclusive.


Three of this week’s poems have endnotes, but these offer only small points of Chinese language exegesis. 

How to Read Chinese Poetry has three chapters on the ci forms Li Qingzhao uses here:

 

Chapter 12, Ci Poetry: Short Song Lyrics (Xiaoling) 

Chapter 13, Ci Poetry: Long Song Lyrics (Manci) 

Chapter 14, Ci Poetry: Long Song Lyrics on Objects (Yongwu Ci)


From next week, we’ll be looking at these as recommended reading.

If you’d like to be added to the reminder email list, let me know the address you wish to be contacted via. (You can also unsubscribe from the reminders at any time simply by replying ‘unsubscribe’.)

Date: 2022-02-06 05:03 pm (UTC)

Re: 3.10

superborb: (Default)
From: [personal profile] superborb
Baike glosses it definitively as mountain peak. The clouds coming from distant mountains originates from Tao Yuanming (Jin poet).

But then its vernacular tl says "The clouds and mist curl around the distant mountain peak like nightfall is imminent"

Profile

dankodes: (Default)
Danmei Dank Odes

May 2023

S M T W T F S
  123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031   

Page Summary

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 19th, 2025 03:51 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios