Liang Desheng Explained

Liang Desheng (; 1771–1847) was a Chinese poet and writer active during the Qing Dynasty. She was the wife of Xu Zongyan, a prominent intellectual from Hangzhou. Since her sister died young, Liang Desheng acted as a surrogate mother for her niece Wang Duan, who would become an editor. Both of them were also friends with another female poet, Gu Taiqing.

Liang Desheng wrote the final three volumes of the tan-ci Zai sheng Yuan. The first seventeen volumes had been written by Chen Duansheng, but she had died before she could complete the work. There were more women who tried their hand at writing a conclusion to the book, but hers was considered superior. It is now regularly printed together with the first seventeen volumes.

It was first published in 1821 and deals with the affairs of three families in the Yunnan province, during the early Qing Dynasty.

She also published a collection of poetry, Guchunxian ji (Poems from Ancient-Springtime Studio)[1]

Translations of her poems are available in several collections. See the translation by Nancy Hodes and Tung Yuan-fang,[2]

References

Ying Zou, "Crossdressing and other Disguises in Zaishengyuan," Late Imperial China 33:3 (2012) 119–153.

Li Guo, Women's Tanci Fiction in Late Imperial and Early Twentieth Century China, West Lafayette, Indiana: Purdue University Press, 2015, chapter 1 "Envisioning a Nascent Feminist Agency in Zaishengyuan," pp. 33–59.

Notes and References

  1. Hu Wenkai 胡文楷, Lidai funü zhuzuo kao 歴代婦女箸作考 Shanghai: Shanghai guji chubanshe, 1985, pp.544-45
  2. Women Writers of Traditional China: An Anthology of Poetry and Criticism, edited by Kang-i Sun Chang and Haun Saussy. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1999, pp.574-577.