Librarian View
LEADER 01941cam a2200301Ia 4500
001
991008123068707546
005
20230322152857.0
008
960306s1997 cau b 001 0 eng d
010
a| 96-12369
020
a| 0804727201
q| (cloth :
q| alk. paper)
035
a| b5381125-852julac_network
035
a| (julac-retro)10574564
040
a| DLC
c| DLC
d| DLC
d| HK-SYU
043
a| a-cc---
050
0
0
a| PL2415
b| .R65 1997
082
0
0
a| 895.1/3009
2| 20
092
0
a| 895.13009
b| ROL 1997
100
1
a| Rolston, David L.,
d| 1952-
245
1
0
a| Traditional Chinese fiction and fiction commentary :
b| reading and writing between the lines /
c| David L. Rolston.
260
a| Stanford, Calif. :
b| Stanford University Press,
c| 1997.
300
a| xiii, 428 p. ;
c| 24 cm.
504
a| Includes bibliographical references and index.
520
a| "In the Ming and Qing periods, the Chinese read fiction in editions with extensive commentary printed on the same page as the fiction itself. This commentary was concerned less with helping the reader understand the 'letter' of the text than with drawing the reader's attention to its more notable aspects through emphatic punctuation (similar to our underlining, italics, or highlighting) and evaluative comments. Authors developed four different approaches to the challenges this type of commentary presented: they wrote their own commentary; they modeled aspects of their narrators on fiction commentators; they left space in their texts for readers to compose their own commentaries; or they combined these approaches. This book is the first concerted effort to see how the existence of the commentary tradition affected the development of Chinese fiction." --
c| Back cover.
650
0
a| Chinese fiction
x| History and criticism.
650
0
a| Chinese fiction
x| Book reviews.
910
a| tfc
b| wsl
998
a| book
b| 22-03-23
945
h| Supplement
l| location
i| barcode
y| id
f| bookplate
a| callnoa
b| callnob
n| CHI101A