Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Dreams as Life and Life as Dreams in Seventeenth and Eighteenth-Century xiaoshuo Narratives

View through CrossRef
Abstract In the depiction and analysis of various transtextual sources and rewritings, this article discusses narratives of Chinese late imperial xiaoshuo that dealt with dreams perceived as equally important if not more valuable than waking life itself. The discourse of these dream stories aimed at underlining the significance of the value granted to dreams, and consequently how this perspective on dreams could affect one’s stance towards life itself. With an emphasis on the eighteenth century, examples comprise narratives from lesser-known collections, such as Xieduo 諧鐸 by Shen Qifeng (1740?–?), but the author also highlights earlier texts—Daoist classics, chuanqi 傳奇 of the Tang, and chuanqi of the Ming—which served as sources for these late imperial tales. Although the theme of life-long dreams is found across the centuries and literary genres, this article points to its various treatments, that differed according to time periods and authors’ personal concerns. It highlights a shift in “life-long dream” stories of the late imperial period towards a concern for private matters, depicted in a detached and/or light-hearted tone.
Title: Dreams as Life and Life as Dreams in Seventeenth and Eighteenth-Century xiaoshuo Narratives
Description:
Abstract In the depiction and analysis of various transtextual sources and rewritings, this article discusses narratives of Chinese late imperial xiaoshuo that dealt with dreams perceived as equally important if not more valuable than waking life itself.
The discourse of these dream stories aimed at underlining the significance of the value granted to dreams, and consequently how this perspective on dreams could affect one’s stance towards life itself.
With an emphasis on the eighteenth century, examples comprise narratives from lesser-known collections, such as Xieduo 諧鐸 by Shen Qifeng (1740?–?), but the author also highlights earlier texts—Daoist classics, chuanqi 傳奇 of the Tang, and chuanqi of the Ming—which served as sources for these late imperial tales.
Although the theme of life-long dreams is found across the centuries and literary genres, this article points to its various treatments, that differed according to time periods and authors’ personal concerns.
It highlights a shift in “life-long dream” stories of the late imperial period towards a concern for private matters, depicted in a detached and/or light-hearted tone.

Related Results

Dreams and Islam
Dreams and Islam
Dreams and visions have been part of Islamic lore since the revelation of the Qurʾan. Referred to variously as ruʾya, manam, bushra, hulm, ahlam, and adhas, dreams are particularly...
Supplementing History: Xiyou bu as a 17th-Century Meta-Xiaoshuo
Supplementing History: Xiyou bu as a 17th-Century Meta-Xiaoshuo
Abstract Xiaoshuo has long been considered supplementary to official historiography in the Chinese literary tradition. In this paper, I will rethink the supplementary nature of xia...
C hina
C hina
Like the novel in many other cultural traditions, the Chinese novel has humble origins and a long history of evolution. Its current name, changpian xiaoshuo ...
Teaching & Learning Guide for: Slavery and Romanticism
Teaching & Learning Guide for: Slavery and Romanticism
Author's Introduction Although it was long neglected on history courses, and almost entirely forgotten on literature courses, slavery and its abolition is now r...
Pre-Ming Narrative Literature
Pre-Ming Narrative Literature
Chinese narrative literature before the Ming period (i.e., before 1368) comprised historical accounts, biographies, myth, ballads and narrative poetry, stories about gods, ghosts a...
Notes On Xiaoshuo: Bao Guang Lu
Notes On Xiaoshuo: Bao Guang Lu
The article from the “Notes on Xiaoshuo” series is a part of a large ongoing research project titled “A Brief History of Chinese Xiaoshuo Prose of the 1st—13th Centuries and is ful...
Nature Transformed: English Landscape Gardens and <i>Theatrum Mundi</i>
Nature Transformed: English Landscape Gardens and <i>Theatrum Mundi</i>
IntroductionThe European will to modify the natural world emerged through English landscape design during the eighteenth century. Released from the neo-classical aesthetic dichotom...
P02-194 - The Sang Bok Lee Neurocognitive Dream Orientations Scales for Screening Traumatic and PTSD-Related Dreams
P02-194 - The Sang Bok Lee Neurocognitive Dream Orientations Scales for Screening Traumatic and PTSD-Related Dreams
AimThe objective of this study was to differentiate ordinary dreams from traumatic and PTSD-related dreams, by using The Sang Bok Lee Neurocognitive Dream Orientation Scales assess...

Back to Top