Li Yu (1611–1680) Explained

Li Yu (given name: 仙侣 Xiānlǚ; courtesy name: 笠翁 Lìwēng; 1611–1680 AD), also known as Li Liweng, was a Chinese playwright, novelist and publisher.

Life and writings

Born in Rugao, in present-day Jiangsu province, he lived in the late Ming and early Qing dynasties. Although he passed the first stage of the imperial examination, he failed to pass higher levels before the political turmoil of the new dynasty, but instead turned to writing for the market. Li was an actor, producer, and director as well as a playwright, who traveled with his own troupe. His play Errors caused by the Kite is performed in the Chinese Kun opera stage.[1]

Li is the presumed author of The Carnal Prayer Mat, a comedy of Chinese erotic literature.[2] He also wrote a book of short stories called Twelve Towers . He addresses the topic of same-sex love in the tale "House of Gathered Refinements" . This is a theme he revisits in the collection Silent Operas (i.e. "novels";) and his play The Fragrant Companion. Li prefaced and published the painting manual Manual of the Mustard Seed Garden in Jinling.

Li was also known for his informal essays, or xiaopin (Chinese: 小品), and for his gastronomy and gastronomical writings. Lin Yutang translated a number of these essays. Li's "On Having a Stomach" proposes that the mouth and the stomach "cause all the worry and trouble of mankind throughout the ages." He continues that the "plants can live without a mouth and a stomach, and the rocks and the soil have their being without any nourishment. Why, then, must we be given a mouth and a stomach and endowed with these two extra organs?"[3] Lin also translated Li's "How to be Happy Though Rich" and "How to be Happy Though Poor", and "The Arts of Sleeping, Walking, Sitting and Standing", which illustrate his satirical approach to serious topics.[4]

Li was critical of gambling, describing dice as innocent objects transformed into devils in the hands of gamblers.[5]

Translations

Sources and further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Chun-shu Chang Shelley Hsueh-lun Chang, (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1992), 48, 60–71, 161.
  2. Chang and Chang, Crisis and Transformation in Seventeenth-Century China: Society, Culture, and Modernity in Li Yü's World. 16, 232–38, doubt Li's authorship.
  3. Yutang Lin, The Importance of Living (New York: John Day: Reynal & Hitchcock, 1937), 43.
  4. Yutang Lin, The Importance of Understanding: Translations from the Chinese (Cleveland: World, 1960).
  5. Book: Chen, Jiayi . Games & Play in Chinese & Sinophone Cultures . 2024 . . 9780295752402 . Guo . Li . Seattle, WA . 138 . Ghostly Dicing: Gambling Games and Deception in Ming-Qing Short Stories . Eyman . Douglas . Sun . Hongmei.