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The Story of Han Xiangzi

The Alchemical Adventures of a Daoist Immortal

Erzeng Yang author Philip Clart translator

Format:Paperback

Publisher:University of Washington Press

Published:3rd Apr '07

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The Story of Han Xiangzi cover

New in paperback, this 17th-centuy novel uses colorful charachters, twists of plot, witty dialogue, and action suitable to a superhero comic book to explain Daoism.

Interspersed with poems and songs, this novel takes its readers over vast distances across China, to the heavens, and into the underworld. It uses colourful characters, twists of plot, and witty dialogue to convey its religious message - that worldly life is ephemeral and that true contentment can be found only through Daoist cultivation.

In this seventeenth-century Chinese novel, Han Xiangzi, best known as one of the Eight Immortals, seeks and achieves immortality and then devotes himself to converting his materialistic, politically ambitious Confucian uncle—Han Yu, a real historical figure—to Daoism. Written in lively vernacular prose interspersed with poems and songs, the novel takes its readers across China, to the heavens, and into the underworld. Readers listen to debates among Confucians, Daoists, and Buddhists and witness trials of faith and the performance of magical feats. In the mode of the famous religious novel Journey to the West, The Story of Han Xiangzi uses colorful characters, twists of plot, witty dialogue, and action suitable for a superhero comic book to convey its religious message—that worldly life is ephemeral and that true contentment can be found only through Daoist cultivation.

This is the first translation into any Western language of Han Xiangzi quanzhuan (literally, The Complete Story of Han Xiangzi). On one level, the novel is a delightful adventure; on another, it is serious theology. Although The Story of Han Xiangzi’s irreverent attitude toward the Confucian establishment prevented its acceptance by literary critics in imperial China, it has remained popular among Chinese readers for four centuries.

Philip Clart’s introduction outlines the Han Xiangzi story cycle, presents Yang Erzeng in his social context, assesses the literary merits and religious significance of the text, and explores the theory and practice of inner alchemy. This unabridged translation will appeal to students of Chinese literature and to general readers who enjoy international fiction, as well as to readers with an interest in Daoism.

The open access publication of this book was made possible by a grant from the James P. Geiss and Margaret Y. Hsu Foundation.

"Readers conversant with traditional and modern Chinese religion, and the Daoist universe of discourse, will appreciate Clart’s painstaking contributions, and eagerly await the companion volume."

-- Russell Kirkland * Religious Studies Review *

"Philip Clart’s complete translation is both elegant and highly readable, and is accompanied by the extent and type of endnotes that will assist readers without a background in Chinese Studies to better understand the story told in this novel."

-- Duncan M. Campbell * Asian Ethnology *

"Philip Clart's accomplished translation of The Story of Han Xiangzi is a welcome development for all scholars and readers concerned with either Chnese fiction or Chinese religion, the book would make excellent reading for courses on Chinese fiction in translation, Daoism, or religion in literature, and would be additionally appealing because if its manageable length."

* Journal of Chinese Religions *

"This first English translation of this important work of Chinese popular religious fiction must be considered a major contribution to the field. Recommended."

* Choi

ISBN: 9780295987255

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 708g

508 pages