VASP Brown Bag | Ting Cheng, "The Transition from Dao Learning to Literary Learning"
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”The Transition from Dao Learning to Literary Learning"
Literary hermeneutics is one of the topical issues among current
Chinese literature scholars in China. This talk will introduce that
literary hermeneutics can be an alternative perspective on the
relationship between Confucian canons and literary composition.
“Transition from Dao learning to literary learning” is an observed
result from this perspective, which initially involves that
Neo-Confucian scholars turned their interest in literary composition
under Mongol rule. Because of the increasingly competitive civil service
examinations and limited official positions, Confucian elites had to
focus on prose writing, give up the paths to officialdom or devote
themselves to other fields, such as poetry. This phenomenon started in
the late southern Song and became obvious in Yuan-Ming China, together
with the inheritance and spread of Neo-Confucianism. With the decline of
state power in the middle Ming, literary learning became one
significant intellectual resource for Confucian elites to challenge or
revise the Cheng-Zhu orthodoxy. This also paved the way for the boom of
literary composition in the late Ming.
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Ting Cheng is a PhD candidate in the Department of
Chinese Language and Literature, Beijing Normal University. His
interests include hermeneutics, ancient Chinese poetics, intellectual
history and new cultural history in ancient China. His research
primarily revolves around the construction of literary hermeneutics
through ancient Chinese thought.