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/Spring in the Ruined City: Selected Poems
Spring in the Ruined City: Selected Poems

Spring in the Ruined City: Selected Poems - Paperback

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Availability:In StockContributor:Du Fu, Jonathan Waley (Translator)Publish date:5/15/2008Pages:104
Language:EnglishPublisher:Shearsman BooksISBN-13:9781848610002ISBN-10:1848610009UPC:9781848610002Book Category:Poetry, Literary CriticismBook Subcategory:Asian, Ancient & ClassicalSize:8.50 x 5.50 x 0.25 inchesWeight:0.3109Product ID:SCT56C12WZ
The Tang dynasty (618 - 907 AD), is celebrated as the greatest moment in Chinese poetry, a time when poetry was highly rated, and some of China's most famous poets were writing. Du Fu (712-770 AD) is widely regarded as the greatest of these. He himself wrote that he aimed to startle his readers, and in some of his more avant-garde poems he combines and contrasts images in a way that has an almost modernist feel to it. On the other hand, he also enjoyed and celebrated the simple pleasures in life, and his (apparently) lighter poems about friendship and his natural surroundings show this clearly.
Language:EnglishPublisher:Shearsman BooksISBN-13:9781848610002ISBN-10:1848610009UPC:9781848610002Book Category:Poetry, Literary CriticismBook Subcategory:Asian, Ancient & ClassicalSize:8.50 x 5.50 x 0.25 inchesWeight:0.3109Product ID:SCT56C12WZ
Du Fu: - Du Fu (Tu Fu in the Wade-Giles transliteration) was one of the two great poets of China's Tang Dynasty; the other being Li Bai (Li Po in the Wade-Giles system). He was born in AD 712 near Luoyang, Henan. He was brought up by an aunt following the early death of his mother. Although he trained for entry into the Civil Service, he failed the entrance exam on two occasions, the second being when all candidates were failed, presumably for reasons other than competence.He married in 762 and had five children, one of whom died in infancy. the family had to move often owing to floods, and civil unrest. In 755 he received a minor court appointment, after several petitions to the Emperor. This was followed by other such appointments, but Du Fu tended to get himself into trouble with authority, and was demoted and sent away from the capital more than once. In 760 he arrived in Sichuan province and stayed there in a thatched hut for some five years, in a state of some penury.In his later years, with his health and eyesight failing, he stayed in Kuizhou, by the Three Gorges, supported by the local Governor. He died in 770.An innovative and difficult poet, Du Fu gradually acquired the status of one of the titans of Chinese literature after his death, and his position in the pantheon is unassailable, being akin to the position enjoyed by Shakespeare in the English-speaking world or Goethe in German-speaking countries.
Publisher: Shearsman Books

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