Research on the Cultural Connotation of the Imageries of Plants in Tang Poetry

Authors

  • Xingjuan Peng
  • Huan Cao
  • Zhaojing Shi
  • Qiming Cao

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.62051/ijsspa.v2n2.24

Keywords:

Tang Poetry, Plant Imageries, Cultural Connotations, Inheritance

Abstract

The poetry of the Tang Dynasty in China has been passed down for a thousand years, among which are numerous descriptions of plant imageries, reflecting the Chinese national understanding of the world and all things within it. Based on a thorough reading, retrieval, and comprehension of the "Complete Collection of Tang Poems", this paper studies the plant imageries within Tang poetry and discusses the cultural significances of these images, including the five major imageries of bamboo, willows, pines and cypresses, lotus, and plum blossoms. By analyzing how poets integrate emotional experiences into plant imageries and thereby create unique poetic moods, the research reveals the distinctive aesthetic appeal and humanistic spirit of Tang poetry, showcasing a rich social life and a profound love for nature. Plant imageries embody the cultural connotations of the Chinese nation, and the inheritance of plant culture is the mission of literary researchers in the new era.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Wan Bojiang, Dan Yao, Gui Shu, Chun Cao, Mu Luo. A Brief Discussion on the Image of Huainan Culture in Tang Poetry[J]. Journal of Huainan Normal University, 2023, 25 (05): 90-95.

Zhang Yuanyu. Grass and trees have their own hearts - Su Shi's "Hezi Youji's Eleven Herbs and Trees in the Garden" Grass and Wood Image Exploration[J]. Middle School Chinese Teaching Reference, 2023, (16): 66-68.

Zhang Xinyu. The relationship between women and vegetation in the Book of Songs[J]. Literature Education (Part I), 2023, (01): 69-71. DOI:10.16692/j.cnki.wxjys.2023.01.019.

Ma Liyuan. Aesthetic Research on Natural Imagery in Tang Monk Hongxiu Collection[D]. Xi'an University of Architecture and Technology, 2022. DOI:10.27393/d.cnki.gxazu.2022.000529.

Guo Yue'e. Unified Edition High School Chinese Ancient Poetry and Grass and Wood Image Teaching Research[D]. Minnan Normal University, 2022. DOI:10.27726/d.cnki.gzzsf.2022.000229.

Li Fujun. The female image of vegetation in the Book of Songs[J]. Peony, 2022, (10): 33-35.

Li Bing. Research on the relationship between plant characteristics and Bixing in the Book of Songs[J]. Modern and Ancient Cultural Creation, 2022, (21): 7-9. DOI:10.20024/j.cnki.CN42-1911/I.2022.21.002.

Zheng Yihan. Reading and teaching research on vegetation writing from an interdisciplinary perspective[D]. Central China Normal University, 2022. DOI:10.27159/d.cnki.ghzsu.2022.003130.

Qi Na. Research on the image of "grass" and "wood" in "Nineteen Ancient Poems"[J]. New Documentary, 2021, (35): 24-26.

Shi Tao. The image of grass and trees in Xie Lingyun's poems[J]. Journal of Qiqihar Normal College, 2021, (03): 40-42. DOI:10.16322/j.cnki.23-1534/z.2021.03.014.

Downloads

Published

18-03-2024

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Peng, X., Cao, H., Shi, Z., & Cao, Q. (2024). Research on the Cultural Connotation of the Imageries of Plants in Tang Poetry. International Journal of Social Sciences and Public Administration, 2(2), 158-167. https://doi.org/10.62051/ijsspa.v2n2.24