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Return to Dragon Mountain

Memories of a Late Ming Man

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
“Splendid . . . One could not imagine a better subject than Zhan Dai for Spence.” (The New Republic)
Celebrated China scholar Jonathan Spence vividly brings to life seventeenth-century China through this biography of Zhang Dai, recognized as one of the finest historians and essayists of the Ming dynasty. Born in 1597, Zhang Dai was forty-seven when the Ming dynasty, after more than two hundred years of rule, was overthrown by the Manchu invasion of 1644. Having lost his fortune and way of life, Zhang Dai fled to the countryside and spent his final forty years recounting the time of creativity and renaissance during Ming rule before the violent upheaval of its collapse. This absorbing tale of Zhang Dai’s life illuminates the transformation of a culture and reveals how China’s history affects its place in the world today.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 28, 2007
      Zhang Dai (1597–1689), subject of this absorbing and evocative literary-biographical study, was a Chinese essayist and historian whose long life bridged the conquest of China by the Manchus and the fall of the Ming dynasty in 1644. The upheaval inspired him to write a history of the Ming as well as personal recollections of his youth, which Spence (Mao Zedong
      ), a MacArthur fellow and a leading historians of China, mines for insights into the culture of this period. Zhang's reminiscences about his earlier life as a well-to-do scholar and aesthete are full of poetic reveries—a treasured blend of tea, evening lanterns in his hometown of Shaoxing, an exquisite courtesan, plum blossoms in the moonlight—which contrast with his later circumstances of poverty, coarse food and wizened, querulous concubines. The memoirs are studded with biographical sketches of his vast extended family, a gallery of eccentrics whose lives furnish handy illustrations of moral precepts. They also open a window on the social world of the late Ming scholarly caste, whose lives revolved around eternal cramming for the examinations that controlled entrée into the imperial bureaucracy; Zhang's father was 53 when he finally passed and was able to get his first job. Through Zhang's Proustian sensibility, Spence retrieves a portrait of a civilization imbued with esoteric obsessions as well as sensuality.

    • Booklist

      September 1, 2007
      Spences dozen-plus histories have inducted readers into intricate corners of imperial Chinese history, and he continues in that vein with this beguiling biographical portrait of scholar Zhang Dai (15971680?). He had a parabolic life: ascending through familial connections to the Ming bureaucracy; descendingafter the dynastys 1644 disintegration before Manchurian invaders. There is a sensible affinity between author and subject in Spences presentation of the analytical Zhang, whose writings comprise biographicalsketches of his family and ancestors, a Ming dynastic history, poetry, and commentary on classical Chinese texts. Zhangs thematic rather than chronological approach to the world is reflected in Spences narrative structure, which initially touches on Zhangs ruminations about the aesthetics of lantern displays, sacred sites and their draw of pilgrims, or character traits of relatives revealed though their tribulations with the state. This induces moods evocative of Zhangs increasingly disturbed times, especially when Spencedescribes the dynastic crisis that pitched Zhang into poverty. Spence only enhances his fine reputation with seasoned perceptions of the accessible, multifacetedZhang Dai.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2007, American Library Association.)

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