ABSTRACT Modern critics generally locate the beginning of the Chinese aesthetic tradition in the Confucian commentarial repression of the “love and marriage” poems of the Book of Songs. This article argues that these commentators were actually using the Songs to engage with Han dynasty debates about desire, and in doing so formulated a new, gendered way of presenting poems as parables.
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© 2006 by The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
2006
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