Encyclopedia

Yüeh-Fu

The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Yüeh-Fu

 

Chinese folk songs recorded by the Yüeh Fu (Music Bureau). Several hundred texts of yüeh-fu have been preserved. They are traditionally divided into three types, which differ markedly from one another: those of the Han period (second century B.C. to third century A.D.) and the northern and southern yiieh-fu of the Six Dynasties period (fourth to sixth centuries). The yiieh-fu deal with love (particularly the southern yiieh-fu), the fleeting nature of existence (the Han yiieh-fu), war, feats of arms, and national calamities. Social protest is expressed mainly in short aphoristic songs similar to the Russian chastushki. Among the many Chinese poets who imitated the yiieh-fu are Ts’ao Ts’ao, Ts’ao P’ei, Ts’ao Chih, Lu Chi, Pao Chao, Li Po, Tu Fu, Po Chü-i, Li Ho, and Wen T’ing-yün.

PUBLICATION

Ko Mao-ch’ien. Yüeh-fu shih chi, vols. 1–12. Peking, 1955.
In Russian translation:
Iuefu: Iz drevnikh kitaiskikh pesen. Moscow-Leningrad, 1959.

REFERENCE

Lisevich, I. S. Drevniaia kitaiskaia poeziia i narodnaia pesnia (iuefu kontsa 3 v. do n. e.-nach. 3 v. n. e.). Moscow, 1969.

I. S. LISEVICH

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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