Yan Yu (poetry theorist) explained

Yan Yu (; 1191–1241[1]) was a Chinese poetry theorist and poet of the southern Song Dynasty. He was born in Shaowu and was active during the reign of Lizong. Yan never became an officer all through his life, and he spent most of his lifetime at home. But he was very concerned about national affairs, and wrote many poems to impugn those affairs of state. He was most famous for his poetic theory book Canglang Shihua (Chinese: 《沧浪诗话》), in which he first proposed that High Tang poetry be taken as the model for all poetry.[1] [2]

See also

References

Yen Yu, Ts'ang-lang's Remarks on Chinese Poetry, in READINGS IN CHINESE LITERARY THOUGHT, edited by Stephen Own, Harvard University, 1992, pp. 391-420.onPoetry

Notes and References

  1. p. 11, The Cambridge History of Chinese Literature, vol. 2, Cambridge University Press, 2010 https://books.google.com/books?id=1jGz0qXPgM0C&pg=PA11
  2. Dong Naibin. Yan Yu, Encyclopedia of China (Chinese Literature Edition), 1st ed.