Knowledge (XXG)

Guwen Guanzhi

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22: 540:'s reign (1695, place of printing unknown) has the preface by Wu Xingzuo, which in the second edition of 1697 has been replaced by the preface of Wu Chucai and Wu Diaohou. The 1697 edition also contained some corrections and changes on the notes and commentaries, but was otherwise of lower quality than the first edition. Only the first edition has been the basis for all following editions (through two 490:
main assets were its ideal size (in terms of number and length of the selected texts), the relative comprehensiveness of its selection, lack of an overly moralistic or tendentious approach, and good notes and comments. The same features have helped the anthology survive through centuries.
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was first and foremost produced as a practical study aid. The compilers avoided overly difficult texts and made their explanations as clear and concise as possible. In its own time,
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is heavily based on a former anthology produced by an altogether different compiler. Though the "blueprint" has often been presumed to be the "imperial" anthology
518:
Chucai, 楚才, 1655–1719), except that he was originally from Shaoxing and never became part of the established literati. Wu Diaohou (given name Wu Dazhi 吳大職,
557:(古文淵鑑), edited during early Qing dynasty under the personal supervision of the Kangxi Emperor, and including the standard commentaries required for the 297:. Today the anthology (in whole but mostly in part) is widely used as required or supplementary reading material of literary Chinese in schools in the 52:
Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
591:. In 1674, Lin was imprisoned by the pro-Ming rebels, who in turn were defeated by the troops under the command of Wu Xingzuo and others in 1675. 60: 731: 587:) in 1658. An earlier version of Lin's manuscript "is said to have been lost in the course of the 'Fujian troubles' ...", referring to the 73:
Content in this edit is translated from the existing Literary Chinese Knowledge (XXG) article at ]; see its history for attribution.
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Reading between the Lines of a Classical Chinese Prose Anthology. Guwen guanzhi as a Subtle Challenge to State Orthodoxy.
460:(古文) refers to. The selection includes also three (or four) pieces written in ”parallel prose” (usually not regarded as 34: 780: 432:(222–589), fascicle 7, 6 texts by one writer from Western Jin/Shu, two from Eastern Jin and one from Southern Qi 455: 328:
has a total of 221 texts. The texts are arranged by period, and originally the book consisted of 12 fascicles (
148: 68: 89: 795: 581:(林雲銘, 1628–97, Fujian). Lin Yunming was a mid-ranking official who had passed the metropolitan examination ( 775: 558: 415: 290: 529:
where he had travelled to take on duties as a private secretary for his uncle, high imperial official
298: 571:(古文析義), often copied character by character. However, the notes and commentaries are all different. 553: 536:
The anthology was originally published in two editions. The first edition of the 34th year of the
245: 578: 82: 567: 530: 507: 503: 727: 64: 510:, who at the time of the publication were working as teachers in a private village school in 541: 282: 165: 186: 480:(literally "read-end") is an idiom meaning "good beyond comparison; cream of the crop." 537: 353: 302: 757:
The Journal of the European Association for Chinese Studies, Vol. 1 (2020), pp. 59-87.
764: 561:, this has proven not to be the case. Instead, altogether almost 90% of the texts in 519: 429: 359: 707:(Harvard East Asian Monographs, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Ma. 2007), 359. 447: 441: 435: 346: 336: 294: 286: 235: 172: 746:
Enlightenment for the Masses. Confucian Education in the Manner of Guwen guanzhi.
724:
Enlightenment for the Masses. Confucian Education in the Manner of Guwen guanzhi.
471: 465: 424: 394: 377: 372: 752: 404: 341: 306: 200: 744: 705:
Commerce in Culture—The Sibao Book Trade in the Qing and Republican Periods
444:(960–1279), fascicles 9–11, 51 texts by 12 writers (all from Northern Song) 515: 511: 221: 242: 71:
to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is
526: 409: 386: 314: 514:. Very little is known of Wu Chucai (given name Wu Chengquan 吳乘權, 399: 382: 310: 454:
Most of the texts are prose written in the "ancient style" which
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Gaudeamus Helsinki University Press. Helsinki (e-book) 2011.
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in 1695. It comprises more than two hundred works from the
533:(吳興祚, 1632–97). His nephew joined him in the work later. 226: 212: 525:
Wu Chucai started working on the anthology in 1678 in
191: 177: 241: 234: 220: 206: 199: 185: 171: 164: 159: 144: 130: 116: 107: 651:(紹興市志, Zhejiang Renmin Cbs. 1996), vol. 5, 3092–3. 635:(紹興市志, Zhejiang Renmin Cbs. 1996), vol. 5, 3098. 450:(1368–1644), fascicle 12, 18 texts by 12 writers 694:(福州市志, Fangzhi cbs. Beijing 2000), vol. 8, 548. 438:(618–907), fascicles 7–9, 43 texts by 9 writers 67:accompanying your translation by providing an 46:Click for important translation instructions. 33:expand this article with text translated from 339:(1045–221 BC), fascicles 1–3, 56 texts; from 136: 122: 8: 397:(206 BC–220), fascicles 5–6, 31 texts; from 647:(紹興縣志, Zhonghua Shuju 1999), vol. 3, 2079. 631:(紹興縣志, Zhonghua Shuju 1999), vol. 3, 2079. 565:originate from another Qing era anthology, 156: 375:(221–206 BC), fascicle 4, 17 texts; from 603: 547:Analysis shows that the composition of 281:) is an anthology of essays written in 104: 522:Diaohou, 調侯) was his younger nephew. 332:, 卷). The composition is as follows: 7: 664:(Zhonghua Shuju, Beijing 1987), 2–6. 285:. It was first published during the 14: 423:and by various writers including 79:{{Translated|zh-classical|古文觀止}} 20: 589:Revolt of the Three Feudatories 251: 227: 213: 278: 192: 178: 137: 123: 77:You may also add the template 1: 660:An Pingqiu (安平秋), preface in 577:was compiled and edited by 502:was compiled and edited by 90:Knowledge (XXG):Translation 812: 407:15 texts; also texts from 262: 155: 112: 35:the corresponding article 118:Traditional Chinese 791:Qing dynasty literature 595:was published in 1682. 132:Simplified Chinese 88:For more guidance, see 771:1695 non-fiction books 751:Kallio, Jyrki (2020), 743:Kallio, Jyrki (2011), 786:Chinese classic texts 673:Kallio, 21–22, 46–48. 559:imperial examinations 291:Warring States period 61:copyright attribution 703:Brokaw, Cynthia J., 464:), as well as three 299:Greater China Region 619:Kallio, 82–84, 116. 37:in Literary Chinese 385:one text, two Chu 69:interlanguage link 781:Essay anthologies 732:978-952-495-607-9 645:Shaoxing xian zhi 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279:古文觀止 138:古文观止 124:古文觀止 57:must 55:You 363:2, 357:3, 246:POJ 767:: 734:. 473:fu 467:ci 419:, 413:, 388:ci 317:. 309:, 305:, 273:( 92:. 85:.

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Knowledge (XXG):Translation
Traditional Chinese
Simplified Chinese
ancient style
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyin
Wade–Giles
Yue: Cantonese
Yale Romanization
Jyutping
Southern Min
Hokkien
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Ming dynasty
Greater China Region
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Hong Kong
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Zuo Zhuan

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