This is the publisher's version, also available electronically from: http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156852602100402332.Precious Mirror of Boy Actresses is the most serious piece of fiction about male love since the late Ming and the lengthiest of all in Chinese literary history. It is remarkable in its extension of the egalitarian implications of the qing aesthetic that it inherits from the late Ming and from earlier Qing literature such as Dream of the Red Chamber. In the homoerotic relationship it idealizes, lovers who are rigidly separated in terms of status nevertheless experience a sublime love which necessarily results in the liberation of the man of lower status. The novel makes unique use of the qing aesthetic's idealization of the femin...
The first detailed treatment of the Chinese homosexual tradition in any Western language, Passions o...
Panel 1: Male Bonds and Wives in Ming-QingPublished in 1632, Jingjiang’s Besotted with Bamboo Reclus...
How did "new women" decide the course of their lives in modern China and how did authors depict them...
This is the publisher's version, also available electronically from: http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15685...
The first Chinese novel to be translated into a Western language, Hau Ch'iu Chuan by Meng-chiao Chun...
Late Qing (清) was a time of profound transformation in China. From 1897, political, economic and cul...
Throughout the twentieth century, homosexuality has been and remains a highly sensitive and controve...
Through literature, authors attempt to both elucidate and more profoundly understand the nature of t...
This dissertation focuses on the Mid-Qing novel Guwangyan (Preposterous Words, preface dated, 1730s)...
This paper examines the nineteenth-century flourishing of a homoerotic theatre literature parallelin...
This thesis studies the Qing women’s writings on the Dream of the Red Chamber. Qing women’s comments...
This dissertation is a genealogical investigation of the thematic significance of female same-sex se...
As one Chinese classics scholar put it, such was the ubiquity of Cao Xueqin’s novel in Qing dynasty ...
8 p. A print copy of the book in which the cited article appears is available through the UO Librari...
This article was published in the Summer 2008 issue of the Journal of Undergraduate Researc
The first detailed treatment of the Chinese homosexual tradition in any Western language, Passions o...
Panel 1: Male Bonds and Wives in Ming-QingPublished in 1632, Jingjiang’s Besotted with Bamboo Reclus...
How did "new women" decide the course of their lives in modern China and how did authors depict them...
This is the publisher's version, also available electronically from: http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15685...
The first Chinese novel to be translated into a Western language, Hau Ch'iu Chuan by Meng-chiao Chun...
Late Qing (清) was a time of profound transformation in China. From 1897, political, economic and cul...
Throughout the twentieth century, homosexuality has been and remains a highly sensitive and controve...
Through literature, authors attempt to both elucidate and more profoundly understand the nature of t...
This dissertation focuses on the Mid-Qing novel Guwangyan (Preposterous Words, preface dated, 1730s)...
This paper examines the nineteenth-century flourishing of a homoerotic theatre literature parallelin...
This thesis studies the Qing women’s writings on the Dream of the Red Chamber. Qing women’s comments...
This dissertation is a genealogical investigation of the thematic significance of female same-sex se...
As one Chinese classics scholar put it, such was the ubiquity of Cao Xueqin’s novel in Qing dynasty ...
8 p. A print copy of the book in which the cited article appears is available through the UO Librari...
This article was published in the Summer 2008 issue of the Journal of Undergraduate Researc
The first detailed treatment of the Chinese homosexual tradition in any Western language, Passions o...
Panel 1: Male Bonds and Wives in Ming-QingPublished in 1632, Jingjiang’s Besotted with Bamboo Reclus...
How did "new women" decide the course of their lives in modern China and how did authors depict them...