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Topic: Su Shi


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In the News (Wed 11 Nov 09)

  
  Su Shi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Su Shi (蘇軾) (1037-1101) was a writer, poet, artist, calligrapher and statesman of the Song Dynasty, one of the major poets of the Song era.
Su Shi was born in Meishan, near mount Emei in what is now Sichuan province.
This faction's rise to power eventually resulted in Su Shi being exiled twice to remote places; first (1080-1084) to Huangzhou (now in Hubei province), and the second time (1094-1100) to Huizhou (now in Guangdong province) and Hainan island.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Su_Shi   (328 words)

  
 CU UNION LIST OF CHINESE SERIALS
U.L. Bei-jing shi jing ji tong ji nian jian.
AS Xi bei shi yuan xue bao.) U.L. Gan-su tong ji nian jian.
U.L. He-nan cheng shi tong ji nian jian.
www.lib.cam.ac.uk /mulu/serlis.html   (14552 words)

  
 [No title]
Su’s verse first lauds his brother for indifference to popular political bandwagons; the second half rakes Su himself for bowing down to current powers that be.
Su’s mount, suspiciously fastidious, refuses to muddy itself in the stream or to tread on the reflected moonlight.
Su Shi, on the other hand, turns either to the "superior man who hangs tough in adversity" kind of eremitic Confucian thought, or to vehicles of escape and transcendence we may closest associate with Zhuangzi and his "Daoist" heirs.
mcel.pacificu.edu /aspac/papers/scholars/mcgraw/mcgraw.htm   (2862 words)

  
 Su Shi's Greatest Works In His Own View
Su Shi and his brother were educated by their parents and at a private school in the neighborhood run by a Taoist priest, and by 1056 they felt confident enough to go to Kaifeng to take the government civil service examinations.
Su Shi also expects the ruler to have a large capacity for self-denial, and a correspondingly strong commitment to improving the lot of his people.
Su is disquieted by this and feels impelled to explain that the classic is not saying that conduct should be fixed and unchanging.
www.geocities.com /WallStreet/Floor/2391/essays/essay29.htm   (4634 words)

  
 Untitled Document
Su Shi thought his art and calligraphy to be of a new meaning: one that strayed away from the ancients and sent scholarly art in a new, better direction.
However, Su did not mean to place the importance of the personal in the representation of things in a manner familiar to the western style, but rather that that personal touch add to the accurate portrayal of nature.
Su Shi’s favorite subjects to describe himself are found in one of his works entitled Bare Tree, Bamboo, and Rocks.
www.stolaf.edu /courses/2004sem1/Art_and_Art_History/259/derekzobel/derek.html   (868 words)

  
 Disputes between Wang AnShi, Sima Guang and Su Shi - China History Forum, online chinese history forum   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Su Shi was a poet and didn't like this - he felt that policy questions were no more practical than poetry, because candidates can give all sorts of ideas that they will never really put into practice when they are in office.
Su Shi also did not like the fact that Wang Anshi had set his own commentaries on the classics as the standard textbook for the examinations - he said that the problem with Wang Anshi was that he wanted to make everyone in the world be like him.
Su Shi (苏辙) felt that there was little guarantee that some borrowers would not squader the loan and create bad debts.
www.chinahistoryforum.com /index.php?showtopic=2887   (1697 words)

  
 SU SHI
Su Shi’s humour uses veiled barb, the sarcastic "apology," the bitter "poor mouth," and the detached self-mockery that convey alienation and resistance to political tyranny.
Su Shi, most powerful and untrammelled of commentators, soon ran afoul of the reigning regime and nearly lost his head in 1079.
Su Shi’s comic verse can be divided roughly into two categories; one that attacks a target, and one that erects a defence against the world’s stresses and pressures.
www.londonfoodfilmfiesta.co.uk /Artmai~1/SuShih.htm   (816 words)

  
 Chinese History - Song Dynasty 宋 literature, thought and philosophy (www.chinaknowledge.de)
Song period writers like Su Shi were not strict Confucians, but their world of thinking is likewise influenced by Daoist and Buddhist philosophy.
Su Shi is also called a master of ci poetry, he influenced a whole group of ci poets like Chao Buzhi 晁補之, Zhang Lei 張耒, Qin Guan and Huang Tingjian.
Su Shi's father Su Xun 蘇洵 (Su the Elder 老蘇) studied the old masters and has written a couple of political essays that display critique on the actual politics of the Song court, enrobed in a refined environment, like Liuguo lun 六國諗 "About the Six Dynasties".
www.chinaknowledge.de /History/Song/song-literature.html   (4008 words)

  
 Su Shi   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
After passing the jinshi examination in 1061, Su was appointed notary in Fengxiang, but his official career was marked by a series of political setbacks which included appointments to remote minor posts, including to the then barbarous Hainan Island from the years 1097-1100.
Su was a master of all literary forms, including shi poetry, ci poetry, fu and prose essays.
English translations of Su's work can be found in Ronld Egan's 1994 study, Word, Image, and Deed in the Life of Su Shi.
www.renditions.org /renditions/authors/sushi.html   (255 words)

  
 Dongbo Pork (东坡肉) - China History Forum, online chinese history forum   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
The famous scholar and poet Su Shi (苏轼), alias Dong Bo (东坡), (1036-1101), was an upright official serving in the Court of Emperor Shen Zong (神宗).
During this term in Hang Zhou, Su Shi undertook various waterworks such as clearing the reed choked waters of the Westlake and building of bridges.
Su Shi was supposed to have told the servants to serve the pork with the wine.
www.chinahistoryforum.com /index.php?showtopic=1249   (1024 words)

  
 Shi Su Xi
Shi Su Xi, previously the acting Abbot of the Shaolin Temple, first came to the Temple in 1935 at the age of 12.
He describes, through my translator Lu Yong, a fairly typical early Shaolin life, which as I've said before, consisted of gong fu and Buddhist training, tending the fields, and maintaining the Temple buildings that were not burned down in the 1928 fires (predominantly, the ones in the front).
Shi Shin Hong, Shi Su Xi, Shi De Yang, and Shi Yong Qiang (Lu Yong).
www.russbo.com /monks/shi_su_xi.htm   (463 words)

  
 Su Shi - Poem of Cold Food Festival   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
At age of twenty, Su Shi passed the highest imperial examination.
He had a successful career, once the head of Ministry of Rites, until he involved in a factional strife and was banished from the court in 1080.
Su Shi sought a noble and perfect personality all his life.
www.rice-paper.com /uses/calligraphy/calligrapher/sushi.html   (141 words)

  
 Association for Asia Research- Su Dongpo: Being childlike and guileless are my teachers   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Min Xu Su Shi (1036-1101), also known as Su Dongpo, is one of the few figures in Chinese history who were masters of multiple artistic and literary disciplines.
Su Dongpo was also a cultivator of Zen Buddhism and engaged in making alchemy pills of immortality.
Su Dongpo was saying that he had attained a higher level of enlightenment, where these forces no longer affected him.
www.asianresearch.org /articles/2375.html   (766 words)

  
 Publisher description for Library of Congress control number 89035048   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Su Shi (1037-1101) is the greatest poet of the Song Dynasty, a man whose writings and image defined some of the enduring central themes of the Chinese cultural tradition.
Su Shi was not only the best poet of his time, he was also a government official, a major prose stylist, a noted calligrapher, an avid herbalist, a dabbler in alchemy, and a broadly learned scholar.
The author shows how this complex personality was embodied in Su Shi's work and traces the evolution of his poems from juvenilia to the poems written in exile in Huangzhou, where Su settled on a farm at East Slope.
www.loc.gov /catdir/description/cam024/89035048.html   (169 words)

  
 Su Shi - TheBestLinks.com - Su Dongpo, Artist, Exile, Painting, ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Su Shi - TheBestLinks.com - Su Dongpo, Artist, Exile, Painting,...
Su Dongpo, Su Shi, Artist, Exile, Painting, 1057, 1080, 1084, 1100, 1101, 1037...
Su Dongpo excelled in the shi, ci and fu forms, as well as prose, calligraphy and painting; some of his notable poems include Chibifu (赤壁賦 The Red Cliffs, written during his first exile) and Suidiaogetou (水調歌頭 Remembering Su Che on the Mid-Autumn Festival).
www.thebestlinks.com /Su_Dongpo.html   (373 words)

  
 Dr Shi Su   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Shi has been responsible for the sub-systems which transfer the heat from the kiln to the turbine, and delivered two critical components of the project.
Shi Su, John H Pohl, Don Holcombe (2002).
Shi Su, John H Pohl, Don Holcombe, John Hart (2001).
www.dem.csiro.au /sustainable_mining/aboutus/people/shisu   (990 words)

  
 Qin Shi Chubian 6a2  
Su Shi (1037-1101) was not only a famous literary figure who initiated a bold and unconstrained school of poetic style.
Although the spirit of his poems was very much influenced by Su Shi, he could not, the way Su Shi could, add lyrics "instantly".
32 Su Shi refers to the fact that foreign music was particularly popular during the Tang dynasty (618-907).
www.silkqin.com /09hist/qscb/qscb06a2.htm   (1671 words)

  
 Harvard University Press: Word, Image, and Deed in the Life of Su Shi
Remembered today primarily as a poet, calligrapher, and critic, the protean Su Shi was an outspoken player in the contentious politics and intellectual debates of the Northern Song dynasty.
Finding a key to the richness of Su's artistic activities in his vacillation on the significance of aesthetic pursuits, Egan explores Su's shi and ci poetry and Su's promotion of painting and calligraphy, looking specially at the problem of subjectivity.
In a concluding chapter, he reconsiders Su's role as a founder of the wenren ("literati") and challenges the conventional understanding of both Su and the Northern Song wenren generally.
www.hup.harvard.edu /catalog/EGAWOR.html   (219 words)

  
 [minstrels] Caught in the Rain on My Way to the Sandy Lake -- Su Shi
I came across Su Shi, most unexpectedly, in a equity research report.
Su Shi himself faced a near-fatal beating, exile, two jail sentences and poverty in harsh backwaters for his outspoken views.
Su Shi (1037-1101) and the Humor of Resistance, David McGraw http://mcel.pacificu.edu/aspac/papers/scholars/mcgraw/mcgraw.htm [this poem is archived, accessible and awaiting your comments at] http://www.cs.rice.edu/~ssiyer/minstrels/poems/1470.html To subscribe, send a blank mail to .
www.cs.rice.edu /~ssiyer/minstrels/poems/1470.html   (347 words)

  
 Su Shi
better known as 蘇東坡 Su Dongpo, was one of the Song dynasty's most influential poets and essayists.
Su Dongpo hears someone playing a sad song outside his window.
Su Che, style name 子由 Ziyou, though overshadowed by his older brother Su Shi, was one of the "Eight Great Prose Masters of the Tang and Song".
www.silkqin.com /09hist/other/sushi.htm   (389 words)

  
 Contour Plowing on East Slope: A New Reading of Su Shi - Questia Online Library   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Michael Fuller has studied how the poetic voice of Su Shi (1037-1101) evolved from youth through early middle age, attaining its well-known mature form during Su's exile at Huangzhou in his late forties.
Some of the book's limitations are deliberate: it discusses only shi, not ci, and does not study the poet's later works.
Other limitations are symptomatic of many new Western studies in Chinese literature: translations that are accurate but hard to follow, overly theoretical analysis that distorts some poems' contents, and occasional attribution of a harshness or violence to classical voices that is misleading and probably not authentic.
www.questia.com /PM.qst?a=o&d=5000164611   (553 words)

  
 Table of contents for Library of Congress control number 2003044537
Table of contents for Creativity and convention in Su Shi's literary thought / Bi Xiyan.
Preface ix Acknowledgments xiii Introduction 1 A. Views of Su Shi's rules of literary creation (zuo wen zhifa).
15 D. Towards an understanding of Su Shi's view of rules and conventions.
www.loc.gov /catdir/toc/fy041/2003044537.html   (240 words)

  
 Chants
Shi-go kong-jung mu saek, mu su sang haeng shik, mu an i bi sol shin ui, mu saek song hyang mi ch’ok pop, mu an-ge nae-ji mu ui-shik-kye, mu mu-myong yok mu mu-myong-jin, nae-ji mu no-sa yok mu no-sa-jin, mu ko jip myol do, mu ji yok mu duk.
The Dharmakaya of Annutara Samyak Sambodhi; the Sambhogakaya of virtue; the supreme Prajna of Mun su Bodhisattva; the supreme activity of Bo Hyun Bodhisattva; the boundless body of Ji jang Bodhisattva; the greatest compassion of Kwan Yin Bodhisattva.
It is used as a verbal protective device or talisman and is considered a strong tool for use in concentration of mindfulness prior to Zazen.
www.zen-catskillny.org /html/chants.htm   (1013 words)

  
 Su Shi - Chinese Calligraphy - Chinese Art
Su Shi - Chinese Calligraphy - Chinese Art
Su Shi (蘇軾) (1037-1101) was a List_of_Chinese_authorswriter, List_of_Chinese_language_poetspoet, artist, calligraphycalligrapher and statesman of the Song Dynasty.
Su Dongpo excelled in the shi (poetry)shi, ci-poetryci and fu forms, as well as prose, calligraphy and painting; some of his notable poems include Chibifu (赤壁賦 The Red Cliffs, written during his first exile) and Shuidiaogetou (水調歌頭 Remembering Su Zhe on the Mid-Autumn Festival).
www.famouschinese.com /virtual/Su_Shi   (399 words)

  
 Books Written By Shi Su - Medical Textbook
Su Shi shu Zui weng ting ji: Wu que zi ben (Li dai shu fa jing hua)
Su Dongbo shu fa quan ji (Zhongguo li dai shu fa ming jia quan ji xi lie)
The prose-poetry of Su Tung-po; (Paragon reprint Oriental series) (Paragon reprint Oriental series)
www.medicaltextbook.com /textbooks/author/Shi+Su   (124 words)

  
 Amazon.co.uk: The Road to the East Slope: Development of Su Shi's Poetic Voice: Books   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Amazon.co.uk: The Road to the East Slope: Development of Su Shi's Poetic Voice: Books
Publisher: learn how customers can search inside this book.
Top of Page : The Road to the East Slope: Development of Su Shi's Poetic Voice
www.amazon.co.uk /exec/obidos/ASIN/0804715874   (302 words)

  
 Su Shi (Su Dongpo) Poetry - China the Beautiful
Su Shi (Su Dongpo) Poetry - China the Beautiful
In the deep night, with the wind still, the sea calm;
Su Shi Main Page Great Poets Poetry Page Home Page
www.chinapage.com /poet-e/sushi2e.html   (362 words)

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