Chinese Rhyme-Prose

Chinese Rhyme-Prose
Authors
Watson, Burton
Publisher
New York Review Books
Tags
poetry
ISBN
9789629965631
Date
1971-01-01T00:00:00+00:00
Size
1.98 MB
Lang
en
Downloaded: 29 times

The "fu," or rhyme-prose, is a major poetic form in Chinese literature, most popular between the second century BCE and the sixth century CE. Unlike what is usually considered Chinese poetry, it is a hybrid of prose and rhymed verse, more expansive than the condensed lyrics, verging on what would be called Whitmanesque. The thirteen long poems included here are descriptions of and meditations on such subjects as mountains and abandoned cities, the sea and the wind, owls and goddesses, partings and the idle life.

Burton Watson is universally considered the foremost English-language translator of classical Chinese literature of the past five decades. His graceful translations are accompanied by a comprehensive introduction to the development and characteristics of the "fu" form, as well as excerpts from contemporary commentary on the genre. A pathbreaking study of premodern Chinese literature, "Chinese Rhyme-Prose" was selected as one of sixty-five masterpieces for the UNESCO Collection of Representative Works. First published in 1971, it has been out of print for decades.