Zhong Rong (Chinese: 鍾嶸; ca. 468–518) was a leading scholar in Chinese traditional poetics, who lived in Southern Dynasties. His representative writing was "Shi Ping" 《詩評》 (Criticism of Poetry or Grades of Poetry) which was renamed "Shi Pin" 《詩品》 (Ranking Poetry) in the Northern Song Dynasty. This thin book is the first one that we have found so far which aims to mark or taste Chinese poets and their poetry. Its introduction or preface presents a profound poetic theory. In the beginning, it tried to define what is poetry and connected it with Daoist's main concept "Qi" (“气”).

Zhong Rong wrote about the more philosophical of the poems written during the time period of the reign period of Yongjia, near the end of the Western Jin Dynasty, saying that overemphasizing the lofty ideas of the Yellow Emperor (Xuan Yuan) and Laozi resulted in "bland and tasteless" poetry.[1]

References

  1. Yeh Chia-ying, translation Josey Shun and Bhikshuni Heng Yin, "Lectures on Tao Yuanming's Poems", a series of lectures at Gold Buddha Monastery, Canada (lecture tapes were transcribed by Tu Xiaoli, An Yi, and Yang Aidi) <"Vajra Bhodi Sea" No.345, February 1999>


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.