Wang Wei (courtesan)

Wang Wei (Chinese: 王微; 1597–1647), also known by her courtesy name Xiuwei (Chinese: 修微),[1][2] was a Chinese courtesan, poet, and traveller during the late-Ming dynasty.[3]

Wang Wei
Native name
王微
Born1597
Yangzhou, Ming China
Died1647 (aged 4950)
Qing China
Pen nameCaoyi daoren 草衣道人 (Taoist in the straw coat)
OccupationCourtesan, Poet
LanguageChinese
SpouseXu Yuqing

Biography

Nothing is known of her family background. At age seven, when Wang's father died, she was orphaned.[3] She was taken in by somebody in the brothel district of Yangzhou and trained to be a courtesan. The training included literacy and artistic skills.[3] During this time she developed a friendship with another courtesan, Yan Wang, the two calling themselves "swarn sisters".[3] Wang referred to herself as the "Straw-coated Daoist".[4] As a courtesan she travelled by skiff between Suzhou and Kuaiji (now Shaoxing). The boat carried many books and she was often accompanied by well known literary figures of the day,[5] including Zhong Xing and Tan Yuanchun, founders of the Jingling school of poetry.[6] She also travelled to West Lake in Wulin (now Hangzhou),[7] a hotspot for literati at the time, and as far as Hunan.[8]

Wishing to change her life, she turned to Buddhism and started to travel, dressed in a simple cotton robe. During her travels she climbed to the peaks of mount Dabie, Mount Xuan, Mount Tianzhu, Mount Kuang and Mount Lu. After travelling she settled in Wulin. She intended to spend the rest of her life there and prepared a tomb for her eventual death.[5] As the Ming dynasty began to crumble, the time became chaotic and Wang was raped in the early 1640s, after which she turned away from Buddhism.[5]

Wang married a Censorate official, Xu Yuqing. Xu was a man of integrity, and was later dismissed from his post after disagreements with the Chongzhen Emperor. The couple were uprooted after Ming fell in 1644, and moved around the south. Although the couple vowed to live and die together, when Wang died of an illness in 1647, Xu lived on to mourn her.[9]

Writing

Wang was a writer and anthologist of travelogues.[10] Tina Lu has argued that nature was only the secondary topic of her work, with the primary focus being a, 'landscape of nostalgia,' that Wang used to express her identity as a traveller.[11] She wrote several hundred travelogues.[12] These may have been part of a commercial venture catering to the late Ming travel boom.[8] One of her works, Ming shan ji (Records of the Famous Mountains), ran to several hundred chapters.[6]

Her poetry appears in the anthology of late Ming-early Qing female poets Zhong Xiang Ci.[1]

Wang's shi poems were described by Qing dynasty commentators as comparable to those of Li Qingzhao and Zhu Shuzhen in their beauty and serenity.[13][1]

References

Notes

  1. Xu (1909).
  2. Lowry (2005), p. 318.
  3. Lee & Wiles (2014), p. 427.
  4. Chang, Saussy & Kwong (1999), p. 333.
  5. Lee & Wiles (2014), p. 428.
  6. Chang, Saussy & Kwong (1999), p. 320.
  7. Lei (1916), p. 13a.
  8. Berg (2006), p. 282.
  9. Lee & Wiles (2014), pp. 428–9.
  10. Xu (1909), "王微常經船載書往來五湖問自傷".
  11. Lu (2011), p. 97.
  12. Lee & Wiles (2014), p. 429.
  13. Zhong (1621–1644), p. 36.1a.

Works cited

  • Berg, Daria (2006). Reading China: Fiction, History and the Dynamics of Discourse. Essays in Honour of Professor Glen Dudbridge. BRILL. ISBN 9789047411468.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Chang, Kang-i Sun; Saussy, Haun; Kwong, Charles Yim-tze (1999). Women Writers of Traditional China: An Anthology of Poetry and Criticism. Stanford University Press. ISBN 9780804732314.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Lee, Lily Xiao Hong; Wiles, Sue (2014). Biographical Dictionary of Chinese Women: Tang Through Ming, 618–1644. M.E. Sharpe. ISBN 9780765643162.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Lei Jin 雷瑾, ed. (1916). "王微" [Wang Wei]. 青樓詩話﹕二卷(雷瑨輯) [Poetry from the pleasure quarters: 2 volumes (edited by Lei Jin)] (in Chinese). Saoyeshan fang yinben 掃葉山房石印本.
  • Lowry, Kathryn A. (2005). The Tapestry of Popular Songs in 16th- and 17th Century China: Reading, Imitation, And Desire. BRILL. ISBN 9789004145863.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Lu, Tina (2011). "The literary culture of the late Ming (1573–1644)". In Kang-i Sun Chang; Stephen Owen (eds.). The Cambridge History of Chinese Literature. Volume 2: From 1375. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 63–151. doi:10.1017/CHOL9780521855594. ISBN 9781139095426.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Xu Naichang 徐乃昌, ed. (1909). "王微" [Wang Wei]. 閨秀詞鈔﹕十六卷(清徐乃昌輯) [Lyrics of well-bred young ladies: 16 volumes (edited by Xu Naichang in the Qing Dynasty)] (in Chinese). Xiao tanle shi keben 小檀欒室刻本. pp. 6.12a.
  • Zhong Xing 鍾惺, ed. (1621–1644). "王微" [Wang Wei]. 名媛詩歸﹕三十六卷(鍾惺點次) [Collection of poems by ladies of note: 36 volumes (compiled by Zhong Xing)] (in Chinese).
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