This book is in the Cambria Sinophone World Series, headed by Victor Mair (University of Pennsylvania).
Despite the “nonhuman” turn in the humanities, studies of animals in Chinese culture are still quite limited in number, while studies of insects in literature are even rarer and tend to focus on only a few aspects, such as cricket fights. The available studies on insects in Chinese literature are almost exclusively limited to insects in Chinese classical poetry, and so provide only a very limited view of the many ways in which insects have been viewed in Chinese culture at large.
This book helps to fill this gap. The first part of this volume begins with the fascination of modern author Lu Xun with entomological literature and satiric animal tales from the West. The book then traces the characterization of individual insects in three thousand years of classical Chinese poetry, from the ancient Book of Odes to the Qing dynasty (1644–1911), as emblems of virtues and vices. Separate chapters are dedicated to the selfless and diligent silkworm, the pure and outspoken cicada, the social organization of the ants and the bees (as well as the philandering tendencies of bees and butterflies), fighting crickets and disastrous locusts, slanderous flies, and sly mosquitoes, as well as body parasites as lice, fleas, and bedbugs. Each chapter includes extensive translations, highlighting lesser-known aspects of well-known poets and introducing original works by lesser-known authors.
Preceding the second part of the book is a short intermezzo devoted to insects in classical and vernacular narrative literature, which shows a preference for tales in which insects appear in human shape. The second part of the book delves into the popular literature of late imperial China, in which insects spoke their minds in the formal settings of weddings, funerals, wars, and court cases. A representative selection of such ballads and plays is discussed and translated and is followed by an epilogue, which contrasts the treatments of insects in Chinese and Western literature.
By contrasting the ways in which traditional Chinese belles lettres, traditional classical and vernacular literature, and popular songs and ballads treat insects, it becomes clear that each of these written traditions portrays insects in particular in its own way: as examples of virtues and vices, as fairies and demons in human guise, and as contentious characters speaking in their own voice. While some insects basically remain the same in all three traditions, other insects show unique characteristics in each tradition. Spiders, for instance, transform from wily hunters in classical poetry, to exhibitionists maidens in vernacular narrative, and to champions of justice in popular songs and ballads. Last but not least, the search for texts on insects reveals many works of considerable literary value which are presented in highly readable renditions.
Insects in Chinese Literature will be of interest to all persons who are interested in Chinese literature and comparative literature, all those who are interested in insects in Chinese culture at large, and all those who are interested in cultural entomology and animal studies.
Wilt L. Idema is Professor Emeritus of Chinese Literature at Harvard University. A recipient of the prestigious Special Book Award of China, Dr. Idema’s many publications include The Red Brush: Writing Women of Imperial China; Personal Salvation and Filial Piety: Two Precious Scroll Narratives of Guanyin and Her Acolytes; Meng Jiangnü Brings Down the Great Wall: Ten Versions of a Chinese Legend; Heroines of Jiangyong: Chinese Narrative Ballads in Women’s Script; The White Snake and her Son; Judge Bao and the Rule of Law: Eight Ballad-Stories from the Period 1250–1450; Monks, Bandits, Lovers and Immortals: Eleven Early Chinese Plays; The Butterfly Lovers: The Legend of Liang Shanbo and Zhu Yingtai; Escape from Blood Pond Hell: The Tales of Mulian and Woman Huang; Battles, Betrayals, and Brotherhood: Early Chinese Plays on the Three Kingdoms; The Generals of the Yang Family: Four Early Plays; The Resurrected Skeleton: From Zhuangzi to Lu Xun; and ”The Immortal Maiden Equal to Heaven” and Other Precious Scrolls from Western Gansu.
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说实话,这本书的结构安排让我有些意外,但深入阅读后,我发现这恰恰是它的精妙之处。作者似乎有意避开了传统的时间线叙事,而是选择了以“功能”和“象征”为核心来组织材料。我最喜欢的是关于“昆虫与社会阶层”的章节,那里详细阐述了特定昆虫形象在不同社会阶层文学作品中的使用差异。比如,在宫廷诗歌中,蝴蝶常常被赋予哀婉的命运感,而在民间歌谣里,蚂蚁却成了勤劳和集体精神的象征。这种对比分析极其犀利,展现了文学如何折射复杂的社会肌理。更绝的是,书中还穿插了一些“冷门”的考据,比如某位唐代诗人记录的关于养蚕的详细笔记,这些细碎的“边角料”被作者整合起来,形成了一个宏大而又微观的文学生态图景。这本书不只是在谈论昆虫,它在用昆虫的“眼睛”去看待那个时代的风土人情和士大夫的心灵世界。文字略显古朴,但逻辑清晰,像是一位老先生在茶馆里,不紧不慢地为你讲述尘封已久的往事,引人入胜。
评分读完这本《Insects in Chinese Literature》,最大的感受是“意料之外的诗意”。我原本以为这会是一本枯燥的学术专著,充斥着拉丁学名和生硬的归类,但恰恰相反,它充满了文学的温度。作者的叙事风格非常灵活,时而像一个哲人,探讨螳螂捕蝉背后的权力哲学;时而又像一个风雅的文人,用优美的散文描述夏夜萤火虫的微光。这种风格的切换使得冗长的论述也变得赏心悦目。比如,书中对曹植笔下蝉声“高吟”的解析,不仅仅停留在声音的层面,而是深入到士人对自由与孤独的哲学辩证。这本书的亮点在于其对“陌生化”的成功运用——它将我们习以为常的昆虫,重新置于古典语境中,让我们看到了它们作为文学载体的巨大潜能。它让你重新热爱起那些你曾经略读而过的古代诗篇,因为你现在拥有了新的“解码钥匙”。
评分这本书简直是一场视觉与知识的双重盛宴!我最近读完《Insects in Chinese Literature》,简直爱不释手。首先,作者在引言部分就展现了深厚的学术功底,他没有急于下结论,而是花了大量的篇幅梳理了古代文人对昆虫观察的脉络。那些关于蝉的咏叹、对蜻蜓点水的细腻描摹,在作者的笔下重新焕发了生命力。我尤其欣赏他如何将生物学知识与文学意象巧妙地结合起来,比如他分析了某一时期特定昆虫的出现频率,如何悄然影响了诗歌的情感基调。书中那些对宋代词人笔下“蝶恋花”意象的解构,简直是教科书级别的分析,读完后感觉自己对那些看似寻常的词句,都有了全新的理解。阅读体验非常流畅,行文如行云流水,即使是非专业读者也能轻松跟上作者的思路,但其深度又足以让研究者感到满足。装帧设计也十分精美,插图考究,每一张图都像是从古代画卷中走出来的,让人在阅读文字的同时,也能享受一场艺术的熏陶。这本书无疑为我们提供了一个全新的视角去审视中国古典文学的丰富性。
评分我必须承认,这本书的学术密度非常高,初读时需要时不时停下来查阅注释。然而,一旦你适应了作者那种严谨的考证风格,就会被其内容的广度和深度所折服。这本书的贡献在于,它系统地梳理了中国文学中昆虫意象的演变路径,远超出了以往研究的碎片化讨论。特别是关于道家思想如何影响了对“变化”和“永生”的昆虫象征的解读,那一段的论述令人拍案叫绝。作者大量引用了罕见的敦煌文献和地方志中的记载,这使得他的论据具有无可辩驳的说服力。对于那些想深入研究中国文化符号的学者来说,这本书简直是必备的参考书目。虽然阅读过程需要一定的专注力,但每一次深入的探索都会带来新的发现和顿悟。它不是那种可以躺在沙发上轻松翻阅的小品文,而是需要你带着探究的热情去“挖掘”的宝藏。
评分这本书给我的冲击是全面的,它成功地构建了一个“微观世界如何映射宏观文化”的完美案例。我特别赞赏作者在最后几章对当代文学和艺术的影响力的回顾。他清晰地展示了传统昆虫意象如何被现代作家所继承、反叛或重塑,比如在现代主义小说中,飞蛾扑火的意象是如何被重新赋予了存在主义的色彩。这种跨越历史的视野,极大地提升了本书的价值。阅读过程中,我反复被作者提出的问题所吸引——文学中的自然,究竟是现实的投射,还是人类情感的投射?这本书没有给出简单的答案,而是提供了丰富的材料供读者自行思考。行文间,那种对中华文化深沉的热爱是无法掩饰的,字里行间流淌着一种对细节的敬畏。这本书绝对值得被列入中国古典文化研究的必读书单,它就像一本精致的放大镜,让你看清了文学土壤中那些微小而重要的生命是如何生根发芽,开出绚烂的花朵的。
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