211 episodes

Lee Moore talks about Chinese Literature.

Chinese Literature Podcast Rob and Lee Moore

    • Society & Culture
    • 4.7 • 36 Ratings

Lee Moore talks about Chinese Literature.

    Jin Yong - Part 1

    Jin Yong - Part 1

    This podcast, we take a look at the life and times of Jin Yong, along with the genre he came to define, modern kung fu literature. We explore Jin Yong's path to becoming China's best selling writer, putting out more books than JK Rowling. We also look at the January 17th, 1954 kung fu match that inspired him and others to turn kung fu into a phenomenon that would over take the world decades later. 

    • 18 min
    Sima Qian - Letter to Ren An

    Sima Qian - Letter to Ren An

    This week is the last in our Sima Qian series, but it is also definitely the best. We look at how Sima Qian lost his testicles while sticking to his principles. We consider the conflict between him and Emperor Wu that percipitated his castration. I also make a big announcement. 


    Here is the Transcript: 
     My name is Lee Moore, and this is the Chinese literature podcast. We are coming to the end of our Summa Chen series. Last week, we looked at Summa Chen's discussion of the capitalists, Summa Chen's defense of free market principles. This week, we are looking at one of the most famous Summa Chen works. And strangely, it might not even have been by Sima Qian himself.
     
    This week we are talking about the famous Bao Ren An Shu, the letter replying to Ren An, the letter to Ren An as it's sometimes translated. First we're going to discuss the controversy surrounding the letter and the context in which it was produced, and then we're going to dive into the letter itself.
     
    So what's the controversy? There's actually a debate as to whether or not Sima Qian wrote the letter. The letter to Renan, despite the fact that This is the work that Sima Qian is most known for. It doesn't appear in the shi ji, the records of the historian. The records of the historian is Sima Qian's main work.
     
    Why doesn't the letter of Ren'an appear in that work? We don't really know. Instead, it appears in the Han shu, the history of the Han, the book of the Han. The Han shu, is a work that appears almost two centuries after Sima Qian's death. Now, the letter to Renan appears in that work and it purports to be by Sima Qian.
     
    Did Sima Qian actually write this letter? It's hard to say. There's a book written by Li Weiyi, Michael Nylan, Han Venice, and Stephen Durant. They're all stunningly good. Scholars, professor Durant's a friend of the podcast has appeared on the podcast way back in April 17. They argue that this letter might actually be written by someone else, but they think it's pretty much true to Sima Qian.
     
    I don't understand what that means if The letter is written by someone else, but true to him, I don't, I don't know. That's a circle that I can't square, but that's fine. I just wanted to talk a little bit about that controversy. Is this letter by Sima Qian? We don't know. Does it matter? Probably not, because for two millennia, it's Chinese readers have been reading this letter and whether or not it was truly written by the real historical Sima Qian, it has become associated with the character of Sima Qian in the minds of so many Chinese readers.
     
    Okay. Enough on the controversy. Let's dive in to the circumstances surrounding this letter. Renan was supposedly a friend of Sima Qian. Renan is involved in a rebellion in 91 BC called the Liuzhou Rebellion. Renan is facing execution because he supposedly did not. display sufficient loyalty to the emperor during this rebellion.
     
    Ren An writes a letter to Sima Qian explaining what happened. Ren An doesn't think his execution is justifiable. Sima Qian replies to Ren An's letter. Sima Qian essentially tells Ren An to suck it up, deal with it. And then he, it is this long disquisition. By so much in explaining what happened to so much in himself and how he dealt with the prospect of almost being executed by the emperor and how in the end so much in lost his testicles though not his life.
     
    Let's jump back in time a bit. So much in served Emperor Wu of the Han dynasty, Han Mu Di. Emperor Wu is very controversial. He institutes this new economic policy, something that we talked about in the last podcast. Emperor Wu also breaks with other traditions. So for about quite the past century, the Han dynasty largely kept the northern barbarians, that is the Xiongnu, in check.
     
    And they had done this with a pretty simple diplomatic formula. They paid them and they married the, uh, Han Dynasty princesses off to the Xiongnu as a way to make sure the Xiongnu had skin in the gam

    • 18 min
    Sima Qian - Biography of the Capitalists

    Sima Qian - Biography of the Capitalists

    Today, we take a look at Sima Qian's Biography of the Capitalists, chapter 129 in the Records of the Historian. This chapter is Sima Qian's two-millennia old defense of free market capitalism. The chapter is one of the most interesting his oeuvre because Sima Qian was condemned for it by later historians. 

    • 14 min
    Sima Qian - Southern Yue People

    Sima Qian - Southern Yue People

    Today, in the second podcast in the Sima Qian series, we take a look at some of the first literary evidence we have for the Nan Yue, the People of the Southern Yue, the ancestors to modern-day the provinces of Guangdong and Guangxi in China and the people of Vietnam. Sima Qian describes the Han Dynasty's colonial conquest of the Yue in vivid detail. 

    • 18 min
    Sima Qian - Series Introduction

    Sima Qian - Series Introduction

    Sima Qian is not only the first historian in Chinese history, he is also one of the greatest writers that China has ever produced. Today, writers of Kung Fu novels point to Sima Qian's stories on fighters and assassins as the origins of the Kung Fu genre. Chinese business people point to his "Biography of the Capitalists" as the reason why Chinese people today are so good at business. He documents the Chinese colonization of the Yue, who once were an independent nation that straddled the border from Guangzhou to Hanoi.   
    Today is the start of a series on Sima Qian. The podcast will take a look at Sima Qian the man and the broader context of China's early historiography. 

    • 19 min
    Children's Book Peek in the Farm

    Children's Book Peek in the Farm

    Today, we do something different. We take a look at a children's book that was originally written in English, and then translated into Chinese. Strangely, the translation into Chinese was done in a way that took the English and translated it into classical poetic forms that hark back to the Tang Dynasty. Journey with me to find out how deeply Chinese poetry has influenced the Chinese today. 

    • 11 min

Customer Reviews

4.7 out of 5
36 Ratings

36 Ratings

mtlhapp ,

Great coverage of under-appreciated art

I only read a bit of chinese literature, but i’m very eager to listen to the relevant episodes of anything i do read. The hosts provide excellent analysis from both Chinese and Global literary perspectives. Thank you for helping me appreciate these great works even more!

LonesoneGeorge ,

More lyrics episodes please 😀

Love the Kong Yi Ji lyrics episode and the Cui Jian one. Would you mind considering talking about some of Luo Da You’s (罗大佑) works? Many of his lyrics are very poetic.

Thank you!

WashingtonDuck ,

Worth a listen

Just came across this podcast while looking at UofO Asian Studies website. It’s enjoyable to listen to. Look forward to future episodes and checking out previous ones.

Top Podcasts In Society & Culture

Fallen Angels: A Story of California Corruption
iHeartPodcasts
This American Life
This American Life
Stuff You Should Know
iHeartPodcasts
Shawn Ryan Show
Shawn Ryan | Cumulus Podcast Network
The Viall Files
Nick Viall
Cancelled with Tana Mongeau
Tana Mongeau & Studio71

You Might Also Like

The China History Podcast
Laszlo Montgomery
Sinica Podcast
Kaiser Kuo
ChinaTalk
Jordan Schneider
Chinese Whispers
The Spectator
Pekingology
Center for Strategic and International Studies
The Ezra Klein Show
New York Times Opinion