Conceptualizing Court Literature with New Methodologies

The Court Imaginary, or the Literary Composition of the Court

Jack W. Chen (University of Virginia)

In this paper, I return to an argument that I ventured at the end of a chapter in my first book, a study of the Tang emperor Taizong. There, I wrote: “That is, despite the very real function of the court in the governance of the empire, it is an institution whose origins may be located in the social imaginary, in the collective imagination of the officials who quite literally may be said to compose the court” (The Poetics of Sovereignty, 266). At the time, this statement seemed controversial to me, an intuition that would surely be criticized by historians who knew better, and I hedged my bets, thinking that surely the court was a real historical space, the site of audiences and ceremonies, and that this was what medieval scholars meant when they wrote about court culture. However, following the publication of monographs by Pablo Blitstein and Luke Habberstad, it seems to me that the question of what a court remains unsettled, and that the imagination of the court is perhaps the more interesting and vital issue. This essay will consider the court as an imaginary space, one composed by the discursive practices of those who attended upon the emperor. I will focus on a set of matching poems about chess to illustrate how social and political space is produced and encoded through the exchange and circulation of literary texts.

Capturing the Shadows of Lovely Ladies: Empresses and Imperial Consorts in History and Fiction

Olivia Milburn (Seoul National University)

Beginning in the Tang dynasty, writers began to produce fictional accounts of life in the imperial harem focusing on the experiences of its female denizens. These tales are important in the history of Chinese fiction writing, because they pay such detailed attention to emotional states and relationships. Living in circumstances of astonishing luxury and privilege, the female characters (often based on genuine historical individuals) are spared many ordinary worries, leaving them free to concentrate on their social and sexual problems. This paper will consider two examples of this genre: the Fenjiao lu 焚椒錄 (Account of Burned Pepper) and Yuanshi yeting ji 元氏掖庭記 (Mr. Yuan’s Tales of the Lateral Courts)—both produced during the Ming dynasty—and explore how the presentation of their female protagonists relate to the Liaoshi 遼史 (History of the Liao Dynasty) and Yuanshi 元史 (History of the Yuan Dynasty) respectively. It appears that successive dynasties maintained a very strict control over information flowing from the Rear Palace, whereby until the fall of the regime concerned and the publication of the official dynastic history, virtually nothing was known about the private life of women in the imperial harem. As a result, there is a significant distinction observable between fictional writings produced before and after the production of the relevant dynastic history.

Texts and Traditions: Tracing the Literary Worlds of Chinese Court Drama

Tian Yuan Tan (University of Oxford)

By focusing on the textual production of late imperial Chinese court theatre, this paper has two basic aims: first, to examine the rich textual forms of what are collectively referred to as ‘court drama’, and second, to consider these performance texts in the context of Chinese literary traditions. In modern scholarship a wide swathe of texts associated with court theatrical performance in late imperial China are classified under the umbrella term ‘court drama’. This corpus comprises a broad spectrum of dramatic texts of different shapes, forms, functions, and sizes, ranging from single-act short plays of only one to two pages in hand-copied manuscripts to grand theatre of 240 acts in lavishly produced five-coloured printed editions. What characteristics, styles, or occasions marked these texts as ‘court’ drama, and more broadly, as a part of Chinese court literature? Which earlier works or literary traditions came to the minds of the writers and the readers in framing the production and reception of these court drama texts? In this paper I trace these literary worlds and connections through the clues provided in the paratexts (prefaces, colophons, etc.) accompanying the production of court drama, as well as intratexts and intertexts within and beyond the immediate corpus, focusing on one Qing dynasty court play.

The Poetics and Politics of Space: Writing Royal Estates in Early Tang Court Poetry

Lu Kou (Bard College)

The early 8th century—after the abdication of Wu Zhao and before the rise of Xuanzong—was a volatile time in Tang history when factionalism festered in the court, and the imperial power was often eclipsed by that of influential royal princesses and imperial-in-laws. Amidst intense political struggles that often led to bloodshed and execution, royal members, especially Princess Anle and Princess Taiping, also constructed luxurious estates of considerable size in the suburbs of the Tang capital of Chang’an. These villas and gardens became the destinations of Emperor Zhongzong’s excursions, where he would often hold banquets and request poetry compositions to celebrate and commemorate the occasion.
This paper examines a group of panegyrics on imperial visits of royal princesses’ estates in the early eighth century. These poems were included in Jinglong wenguan ji 景龍文館記, a collection of poetry composed by academicians of the highest echelon of the court society for a variety of courtly events. As courtiers were required to adequately describe and laud both the imperial adventus and the princess’ newly constructed estate in their composition, I focus on a spatial or spatialized imagination and representation of imperial power in court panegyric, hence the poetics and politics of space. By “poetics,” I mean the literary conventions associated with describing villas, palaces, or other dwellings of a royal member, and by “politics,” I mean the subtle negotiation of the power dynamic between the ruler and contenders (i.e., princesses), articulated within the confines of court decorum. This paper suggests that, on the one hand, the envisionings of the political order shape “space” into various configurations in court poetry, and, on the other hand, the arrangement and manipulation of poetic images also participate in the redefining of the boundaries between imperial orthodoxy and potential transgression. This paper shows that this group of court poetry—all composed “to the imperial command” yingzhi 應制—was far from homogeneous in tone and content but demonstrated different voices, ideas, and visions of the imperial space.

God’s Earthly Abode: Reconsidering the Construction of Genyue at Emperor Huizong’s (r. 1100–1125) Court

Huijun Mai (UCLA)

This paper re-examines the construction of Genyue (Northeast Marchmount, an imperial park centered around a manmade mountain) at Emperor Huizong’s court between 1117 and 1122, during the twilight years of the Northern Song Dynasty. The largest architectural and engineering initiative of its times, Genyue was often viewed as an imperial pleasure park, a materialization of Huizong’s artistic predilections and a symbol of the court’s splendor (which historians held accountable for its subsequent demise). Such prevailing assertions failed to account for Genyue’s central place in the entanglement of space, religions, and domestic and inter-state politics at Huizong’s court. In this paper, I study a set of literary texts produced at Huizong’s court at the time of Genyue’s completion; I further illuminate these literary compositions by examining another set of historical sources that documented a series of events leading up to the construction of Genyue and by attending to the gaps and contradictions between these sources. I argue for Genyue’s place as an ideological landscape and a religious-political theatre. As Huizong’s religious-political enterprise, Genyue materialized the emperor’s ambition to insert himself into Daoist pantheon and, with the garnered religious efficacy, to reassert his court’s dominance over its powerful neighbors on the northern and northeastern frontiers. In reassessing how spatial configurations participated in advancing religious and political ambitions, this paper calls attention to the agency of literary texts in aiding such enterprises and, methodologically, the usefulness of literary texts in uncovering hidden facets that were often concealed in the moralized historical assessments.

宮墻內外:地方書寫傳統中的《北京八景》及其禁苑景觀

葉曄(浙江大學)

“北京八景”最早見於金《明昌遺事》,元時已有題詠。明永樂十二年,翰林院侍講鄒緝倡“北京八景”詩,有十二詞臣唱和及王紱繪《北京八景圖》,稱一時盛事。其後詩卷流傳至東亞諸國,有朝鮮、日本刻本存世,在漢文學範圍內的影響尤大。八景文學的傳統,源自北宋的“瀟湘八景”,一直是詩畫合璧創作的典型,後來成為文人建構地方性知識的重要文學類型之一,至清代發展為凡井水處即有八景題詠的全民盛況。但“北京八景”中的“太液秋風”“瓊島春陰”二景,在金、元、明、清四代皆屬皇家禁苑,這與八景文學傳統中一貫的地方性寫作傾向,多少有些相悖。永樂年間的翰苑詞臣固有遊觀西苑的經歷,但後世的普通讀者如何想象這些禁苑景觀,詩畫合璧的文本形態在其中起到怎樣的作用?據史料可知,永樂年間的詞臣唱和與王紱繪畫,是兩次先後有差的文藝活動,那麽,以不同的作者身份登場的翰苑詩人與宮廷畫家,他們對詩歌與圖像之互文性關係的認識有何不同,又與後來難窺宮墻之內的普通讀者的詩、畫閱讀體驗有何不同?無法進入禁苑的那些詩人,是通過文本想象,還是繪畫觀覽,創作出新的完整的“北京八景”詩?這些皆可追問。通過“北京八景”組詩結構中的內外分野、整體合一的寫作模式,及其與更廣闊的文學世界之聯動,或可管窺中華帝國晚期宮廷文化之邊界消泯的一個側影。

酬對袞袞:乾隆朝地方志中的宮廷唱和

顏子楠(北京師範大學)

本文討論清代乾隆時期編修的兩部最具代表性的地方志《西湖志纂》與《欽定盤山志》中收錄乾隆皇帝御制詩和臣子恭和詩的狀況。官修《欽定盤山志》創立了乾隆朝官修地方志的標准,即以數卷御制詩作為地方志的“卷首”,以此來標榜乾隆的御制詩。私修《西湖志纂》作為進呈御覽的逢迎之作,在標榜皇帝的同時,也展現了沈德潛借皇帝自重的私心。這兩部地方志的編撰體例不同,但其性質相同,均以乾隆皇帝作為首要讀者,進一步揭示了乾隆時期宮廷文學的特點。

清宮廷演劇《獅吼記》研究

蔡欣欣(國立政治大學)

明代汪廷訥以戲謔寫風教,演繹世俗人情與開釋佛理禪機,描述宋代陳季常懼內與妻子柳氏悍妒故事的《獅吼記》傳奇,自萬曆環翠堂刻本問世後,在文人氍毹與民間戲場搬演不輟,清代時更進入宮廷內府承應演出;且因應清宮演劇場合的特殊屬性,以及帝王后妃的觀賞喜好,在劇目文本、音樂聲腔與演出型態上有所繼承與發展。本文擬對清代南府與昇平署留存戲本,如乾隆內府五色抄本《節節好音》的「上元節戲」〈河東獅吼〉,乾隆內府四色精抄本《獅吼記傳奇》的「連四齣折子」小全本,〈梳妝跪池〉、〈頂燈變羊〉與〈三怕〉「總本」崑腔單齣戲、〈跪池〉「總本」亂彈單齣戲,以及清車王府曲本《變羊記》「總講」等進行闡論;繼而搭配恩賞日記檔、穿戴題綱、內務府衣箱清單以及承應劇目總集等宮廷演劇史料,共同重構出《獅吼記》在清宮中的演出面貌,例如內外學戲班皆有承應,崑腔與亂彈均唱,又兼具了儀典與娛樂的雙重性質等等,同時也進一步探究宮廷與民間「媒介迴路」(medialoop)的演劇現象。

Managing Failures in the Qing Court Theatre

Liana Chen (George Washington University)

Existing Qing-dynasty written and visual accounts—records of theatre-going experiences by court officials and foreign guests, and court-commissioned birthday scrolls and battle prints, to name a few—collectively paint a picture of the grandeur and magnificence of the Qing court theatre as perceived by its sponsors and participants. Thanks to the publications of the Shengping shu archives in the past few decades, current scholarship has established theatrical performances as an organic component of the court ritual and life-cycle events, and Qing emperors as informed and astute patrons of performing arts, making theatre work for their personal and political agendas. However, the same set of archival materials, when examined closely, also tells a story of how failures on and offstage were anticipated, accommodated, mitigated, or quite unexpectedly, turned into a source of inspiration for the managers and actors of the court theatre.
This paper proposes to examine the operation of the Qing court theatre and its theatrical productions through the lens of failure. It postulates that such an angle could be a productive one, as it provides us with a framework to read and interpret court-commissioned ceremonial plays within the context of the palace troupe’s operation. The first part of my analysis will focus on the court’s changing policies in terms of actor recruitment, staffing and training, and the second part of the paper examines failure as a plot device in court-commissioned theatrical productions for ceremonial occasions. Through this, we will also consider to what extent the late-Qing court’s active patronage played in the development and consumption of xiqu may have been resulted from the need to accommodate its own exigencies.

Analogue Texts, Digital Methods: Building a TEI Schema for Chinese (Court) Drama

Ewan MacDonald (University of Oxford)

The huge volume of interconnected and mostly anonymous texts that make up the worlds of Chinese court drama constitute an ideal context for the application of digital methods. The common practice of textual reuse, and the large number of plays with the same title but different content, or the same content but different titles, compound the difficulties of approaching this body of texts using conventional methodologies of reading and analysis. The magnitude of the task facing the prospective scholar of Chinese court drama is one factor contributing to the relative lack of writing on the subject. Digital tools can be an effective way to make these texts, and the relations between them, more visible and accessible.
One digital tool that plays a role in this effort is TEI (Text Encoding Initiative) markup, a standard for encoding digital text in an XML machine-readable format. This provides a foundation on which further digital analysis can be performed. However, the process of fitting a highly heterogenous and extremely "analogue" group of texts, including manuscripts, into a universal digital standard with limited flexibility created without the specificities of Chinese drama in mind is itself a challenging one, involving many compromises. In this paper we discuss these challenges and propose a TEI schema suitable for the encoding of Chinese court drama at scale, with potential wider applicability in the TEI encoding of Chinese drama more generally.

Elm Trees Planted in Heaven: On the Evolution of Fu Poetry from Court Spectacle to Regulated Genre

Nicholas Morrow Williams (Arizona State University)

The regulated fu (lü fu 律賦) of the Tang at first glance appears remote from its antecedent, the grand fu poetry of the Han. In particular, Tang poets generally seem to have lost interest in imitating the elaborate depictions of imperial capitals and palaces. But even as the scale of fu poetry narrowed, its new guise still retained symbolic and structural connections to the origins of the form. To begin with, the regulated fu continues to employ certain extrametrical phrases to arrange the structure of the piece, dividing a text into distinct paragraphs that focus on distinct topics. In regard to content, it is worth noting the enduring popularity of historical rulers as the subjects of these later fu poems, not least Emperor Wu of Han in mourning for his Lady Li. And beyond these more tangible echoes of the Han fu, the regulated fu also delights in symbolically-abbreviated representations of more grandiose scenes, whether mythological, celestial, or imperial. The paper concludes by illustrating the argument with late Tang poet Xue Feng’s 薛逢, “Tianshang zhong baiyu fu” 天上種白榆賦, which finds in the white elm tree a tantalizing recollection of celestial landscapes above.

Emotion, Centripetalism, Readership: Writing of Empress Wu’s Court

Xiaofei Tian (Harvard University)

In this paper, through discussing writings produced in the court of Tang/Zhou Empress Wu and its aftermath, I reconsider the meaning and range of court poetry. A key general argument to be made in this paper is that the concepts of “court culture” and “court literature” should always be interrogated and adjudicated within a specific historical context. The court existed through the entire premodern Chinese history, but was there always a court culture or a court literature? If there was, did it remain changeless, or did it change with times? Empress Wu’s court provides an intriguing example of how court life, court culture, and court literature could take on a very distinctive character, illustrating the overall importance of a more historically sensitive and nuanced treatment of the concepts of court culture and court literature. Specifically, I propose thinking of court poetry from the perspectives of centripetalism and textual dissemination, and reconsidering the dialectics of court and exile within this new framework.

The Illusion of a Unified Style: Poetry Composed by the Kuizhang Academicians in the Early 14th Century

Ming Tak Ted Hui (University of Oxford)

The establishment of the Kuizhang Academy 奎章閣 by Emperor Wenzong of Yuan 元文宗 (1304-1332) in 1329 was often considered as a high point of court culture in the early 14th century. As renowned literati like Yu Ji 虞集 (1272-1348), Jie Xisi 揭傒斯 (1274-1344) and Ma Zuchang 馬祖常 (1279-1338) were appointed to serve as the academicians, the court provides a venue for scholars from a diverse background to exchange and comment on the poetry of one another. Using the literary productions associated with the Academy as a case to assess the meaning and mechanism of court literature, this paper will first investigate the aesthetic pursuits of these academicians through looking at their poetic exchanges. It will then examine how these poets quickly gained prominence through the commentaries made by their contemporaries, and how these commentaries were circulated in a broader literati network. This paper argues that the diverse styles of each individual academician were greatly simplified in the literary criticisms of the time to create an illusion of the existence of a unified style in court, and this, in turn, facilitated the emergence of court poetry in the Yuan dynasty.

From Single-tiered to Three-tiered: The Stage Performance of The Precious Raft of Ascending Peace

Mei Yi Lau (University of Oxford)

Based on the fiction Journey to the West, the Qing imperial “grand play” The Precious Raft of Ascending Peace (Shengping baofa 昇平寶筏) narrates the pilgrimage of the Tang dynasty Buddhist monk Xuanzang 玄奘 and his disciples. This 240-act lavish production was first composed at the command of the Kangxi Emperor (1654-1722). After his accession, the Qianlong emperor (1711-1799) ordered Zhang Zhao 張照 (1691-1745) to refashion the Kangxi version and present it to the throne for approval. Among all editions in the Qianlong period, the Osaka edition in the collection of the Osaka Prefectural Nakanoshima Library is known to be the closest to Zhang Zhao’s work. It was designed for performing on a single-tiered stage. In later editions, there are traces of a gradual shift from a single to a three-tiered stage performance. By analysing and comparing the mode of performance and the structure of different Qianlong era editions, this paper aims to examine how the development of the three-tiered stage changed the production of court play, how the later compilers adapted to the new stage and facilities, and how they adjusted the performance accordingly.

Witness in Situ: The Individual Voice and Multiplicitous Roles of a Qing Courtier

Yuanyuan Su (University of Oxford)

As one of the ethnic minorities in China, the Manchus’ voices have been disempowered and neglected since the collapse of the Qing empire in 1912. The impact of political change leads to a narrow view on Manchu literature among Chinese scholarship. Specifically, on the pre-modern literary firmament, contemporary scholars pay more attention to Chinese literati and their works, rather than Manchu literati—the ruling class of the Qing empire. Among the limited research on Manchu literati, the voices of imperial clansmen are rare and small.
To fill the significant lacuna, this paper is a case study of an imperial clansman Aisin Gioro Yigeng 愛新覺羅奕賡, demonstrating the different roles Yigeng played across multiple genres and his individual voices between the lines. He switches multiple roles—imperial clansman, literati, commentator, imperial bodyguard, and zidishu writer—within both the multiple literary genres and the declining mid-Qing bannermen group. Taking all his existing works, namely eleven under his real name and twenty zidishu (youth tales) under a pseudonym, a storytelling genre prevalent among Manchu bannermen from around 1735 to 1912, it is a first thorough attempt to explore these hitherto understudied texts and listen attentively to his own voices. His pride and guilt hidden behind the multiple roles are specifically reflected in his zidishu, which differentiate his individual voices from other zidishu writers, but may also provide us with some new possibilities and reconsiderations on the definition of “court literature.”

從政典到文章:《左傳》在康熙宮廷語境中的再闡釋

康琳悦(北京師範大學)

清初之前,歷代官學都將《左傳》安置在“春秋學”體系的支脈裡,借以維系經學的宏大景觀。在康熙朝,皇帝與高層儒臣從“春秋學”的《左傳》切入,實行了一系列的文教革新。首先,在“日講”、“御纂”活動中,《左傳》在《春秋》經傳中的地位借由政治話語的導向得到提升。其次,康熙親自參與下的古文選集活動觸發了朝野對於《左傳》的評點之風。再次,高層文學侍臣通過撰寫私著進一步探查了《左傳》文本的敘事性與修辭性。從整個過程來看,康熙本人的文化涵養與清初時局的政治訴求,使得宮廷對於《左傳》的闡釋立場逐漸從政典解讀向文章品論發生著轉變。