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Encyclopedia > Dream of the Red Mansion


Dream of the Red Chamber (Chinese: 紅樓夢; pinyin: hóng lóu mèng) or Chronicles of the Stone (Chinese: 石頭記; pinyin: shí tóu jì), written by Cao Xueqin, is one of the greatest masterpieces of Chinese fiction, written in the 18th century during the Qing Dynasty. The title of the novel has translated a number of ways, with the word "mansion" or "room" (in singular or plural form) being substituted for "chamber," as in Dream of Red Mansions or Dream of Red Rooms.


As riveting as any soap opera, it can also be read as a study of 18th-century Chinese manners, or as a Buddhist allegory. A lengthy work, the first 80 chapters were written by Cao and the remaining 40 chapters attributed to a Gao E, who published the combined version in 1792. Gao E claimed to have completed the work based on a manuscript by the author.

Enlarge
A scene from the story, painted by Xu Bao (b.1810)

The story orbits around a wealthy but declining family, the Jia clan, who occupies two large family compounds in the capital. The main characters are the powerful family matriarch Grandmother Jia, the peculiar grandson Jia Baoyu (賈寶玉), who might actually be a stone brought to life, and his two girl cousins, the socially-graceful but inwardly cold Xue Baochai (薛寶釵) and the temperamental, sickly Lin Daiyu (林黛玉). In fact, it would be more accurate to say the main character is the family itself: its many members, their servants, their mutual obligations and expectations, and the unfolding fate of each person.


The novel is graced with different styles of foreshadowing. Through all, the author reveals the reality of life amidst the "red dust" -- the grasping, yearning, opulent, and ultimately futile life of both peasant and elite in 18th-century China. Taoist and Buddhist themes are woven deeply into the structure of the novel and one of Cao Xueqin's aims is to reveal the emptiness and beauty of the aristocratic society he unveils for us.


External link

  • An Introduction to Editions of the Red Chamber, David L. Steelman, The Scholar, 1981 (http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/chinese/HLM/hlmitre2.htm)

  Results from FactBites:
 
DreamRedChamberOutline (1426 words)
Cooper, Eugene, and Meng Zhang, "Patterns of Cousin Marriage in Rural Zhejiang and in Dream of the Red Chamber," Journal of Asian Studies, 52.1 (February, 1993) DS 501/.J6 Edwards, Louise, "Jia Baoyu and Essential Feminine Purity," The Journal of the Oriental Society of Australia, 20-21 (1988-1989).
Miller, Lucien, Masks of Fiction in Dream of the Red Chamber: Myth, Mimesis, and Persona.
Yang, Hsien-yi and Gladys Yang, A Dream of Red Mansions.
Dream of the Red Chamber - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1361 words)
Dream of the Red Chamber (Traditional Chinese: 紅樓夢; Simplified Chinese: 红楼梦; pinyin: hóng lóu mèng), also known as A Dream of Red Mansions, The Story of the Stone, or Chronicles of the Stone (Traditional Chinese: 石頭記; Simplified Chinese: 石头记; pinyin: shí tóu jì) is one of the masterpieces of Chinese fiction.
It was composed sometime in the middle of the 18th century during the Qing Dynasty, and its authorship is attributed to Cáo Xuěqín (Cao Zhan).
"Red Mansion" was an idiom for the chamber where the daughters of rich men live; thus the title can be understood as a "dream of rich young women".
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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