Lu Ji (middle name - Shih-heng, 261-303) - Chinese poet. One of the leading writers and theorists of literature in medieval China. He came from a family of a major official. He was falsely accused of treason and killed.
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The author of more than 200 poems, including the poem "Wen Fu" 文 賦 - one of the first Chinese poetics. This poem (one of the most significant literary and theoretical monuments of early medieval China) was translated into Russian by Academician V. M. Alekseev under the title “Ode to the Elegant Word.” It is believed that Lu Ji was the first to apply a parallel construction of the verse, which later became the norm of Chinese poetry. Lou Ji's younger brother was the poet Lu Yun (262-303).
Notes
- ↑ International standard name identifier
- ↑ 1 2 Encyclopædia Britannica
- ↑ 1 2 Faceted Application of Subject Terminology
- ↑ LIBRIS
- ↑ LIBRIS - 2012.
Literature
- Alekseev V. M. Roman Horace and Chinese Lu Ji on poetic art. / / News of the USSR Academy of Sciences. Department of literature and language. 1944, Volume 3. Issue 4. S. 154-164. The same. - V. Alekseev. Works on Chinese literature. In 2 books. Prince I. M., 2002.
- Bobrovnikova, T. A. Grek, Platon and Chinese, Lu Ji, on the Meaning and Purpose of Poetry (Following the “Comparative Studies” by V. M. Alekseev). // East-West. Historical and literary almanac. 2003—2004. M., 2005. P.127-140.