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Chinese Literature Podcast

Lee Moore talks about Chinese Literature.
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Chinese Literature Podcast
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Now displaying: 2017
Dec 8, 2017

I know you are going to like this podcast about Zhuangzi and his dumb foil for everything Huizi. In it, the pair discuss whether it is possible to know how others feel, and on what basis one can make those kind of assumptions. As is usual with Zhuangzi, nothing is fixed, so question everything as you descend to the Hao River and join us for a conversation with Zhuangzi. 

Nov 20, 2017

Tao Yuanming's Peach Blossom Spring is one of the most famous in all of Chinese literature. A fisherman wanders into a cave and stumbles upon a utopia, but leaves it all because he wants to tell others. Join us as we dive into the cave with Tao Yuanming. 

Jul 17, 2017

The General's Head

Jul 17, 2017

Song Dynasty Ci - Liu Yong

May 22, 2017

This week, we are getting back to our roots. Some of the earliest podcasts we did were on the huaben (話本) story. The very first podcast we posted (we recorded others before, but we canned them because they weren't good enough) was a huaben  that we called Of Gods and Telescopes. We also did the gender-bending huaben Male Mencius' Mother and Jiang Xingge's Pearl-Sown Shirt. The huaben is just a kind of short story from the Ming and Qing Dynasties. Huaben operate in a karmic universe where bad deeds are punished and good deeds rewarded.

In today's podcast, we look at the Feng Menglong story, "Shen Xiu and his Bird Causes 7 Deaths." The story starts with a rich layabout, Shen Xiu, who is always out playing with his bird. While he is out, Shen Xiu collapses and Zhang, a cooper, sees him lying there with his bird. He decides to steal the bird, but Shen Xiu comes to, so Zhang kills Shen Xiu and sells the bird. Afterwards, several more people die in this trail of horrors. The question that Rob and Lee argue over is whether or not a moral balance is restored to the universe.

May 5, 2017

Nick Stember and Jia Pingwa's Ugly Stone

Mar 22, 2017

Are you listening to the world's only Chinese Literature podcast right now? Or are you just a butterfly floating around who is dreaming that you are a human who is listening to this podcast? How can you prove that you are actually the human rather than a butterfly dreaming they are a human? Is it even possible to prove something like that?

You have now entered a world of philosophical pleasure and pain that is the Zhuangzi, an ancient Chinese text that has teased and troubled scholars for almost three millennia. We will game around with some of the issues playing out in the dream of the butterfly, the most famous passage in the text.

Feb 22, 2017

In today's podcast, we return to the Historian of the Weird, that is the late, great Pu Songling. Previously, we did a podcast on his touching love story about a man and his rock. This time, we take a look at an equally 'touching' love story, though here, we are talking about bad touch. In the story that is literally translated as Human Prodigy (人妖), a family named Ma tries to play the old trick-a-roo where you invite the local virgin to give your wife a massage and then, in the darkness the husband takes the wife's place. But when Mrs. Ma slips out of bed and Mr. Ma slips into bed, Mr. Ma finds a surprise. The young virgin he wanted to rape is actually a man...we'll leave the rest to be discussed on the podcast. This disturbing, gender-bending story makes for an interesting read and an even more interesting discussion. 

Jan 21, 2017

Podcast on a poem by Du Fu

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