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The Emperor of China in a House of Ill Repute

Songs of the Imperial Visit to Datong

Pu Songling author Wilt L Idema translator

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc

Published:16th Dec '23

Should be back in stock very soon

The Emperor of China in a House of Ill Repute cover

The Hsu-Tang Library presents authoritative and eminently readable translations of classical Chinese literature, in bilingual editions, ranging across three millennia and the entire Sinitic world. The Emperor of China in a House of Ill Repute by one of China's most famous authors builds on earlier dramatic works that had been inspired by the antics and travels of the Zhengde emperor (posthumous title Wuzong; r. 1506-1521) of the Ming dynasty. The Zhengde emperor was, despite his reign title ("Right Virtue"), a dismal failure as emperor. His life was given over to the pursuit of pleasure. When in Beijing he often left the palace in disguise and roamed the city incognito. He also made several long and elaborate trips to other parts of the empire, for instance one to Nanjing and Yangzhou, and one to the cities of Datong and Taiyuan in Shanxi. While these historical trips might have had a certain military purpose, the popular imagination saw them as informed by a search for beautiful women. In alternating prose and song, The Emperor of China in a House of Ill Repute tells the tale of the emperor setting out for Datong in the disguise of a common soldier after his evil genius Jiang Bin has told him about the beauty of the three thousand courtesans in the red-light district of this garrison town. This volume presents a fully annotated translation of all twenty-eight chapters of the work, preceded by an Introduction that provides context to the life and works of Pu Songling, the genre of "rustic songs" to which the work belongs, and the specific characteristics of the translated text.

Consistently entertaining - a very rollicking good read. The mix of crudeness and eloquence--manifesting itself both in the presentation of the story and in the character of the Zhengde emperor - can be jarring, but often also works well, especially in the confusion it causes those who deal with the Zhengde emperor... A solid, full-fledged novel, and it's good to see it available in English translation. This Hsu-Tang Library of Classical Chinese Literature also provides the Chinese original facing the translation - always welcome - and Wilt L. Idema's Introduction is also a helpful and informative one. * The Complete Review *
[The Hsu-Tang Library] will open up a classical tradition that spans millennia, relatively little of which has ever been translated into English. There is a humanity and irreverence to some of these works that readers expecting stuffy, prim Confucian moralizing will find refreshing. * The Wall Street Journal *

ISBN: 9780197606308

Dimensions: 226mm x 165mm x 61mm

Weight: 726g

424 pages