Jin Ping Mei

From Robin's SM-201 Website
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Four Great Classical Novels
Romance of the Three KingdomsWater MarginJourney to the WestDream of the Red Chamber
Jin Ping Mei is sometimes regarded as the fifth classic.


Jin Ping Mei
TheGoldenLotus.jpg
English title: "The Golden Lotus"
Author: Lanling Xiaoxiao Sheng
("The Scoffing Scholar of Lanling", pseudonym)
Written: Wanji era (1573—1620)
Translator Clement Egerton
Period 16th Century
Subject Chinese erotica
Pages 640p
Dimensions 5.2 x 1.6 x 8 inches
Weight 1.2 lb
ISBN-10 0804850445
ISBN-13 978-0804850445

Jin Ping Mei or The Plum in the Golden Vase (Jīn Ping Méi) (also The Golden Lotus) is a Chinese naturalistic novel composed in the vernacular (baihua) during the late Ming Dynasty. The author was Lanling Xiaoxiao Sheng (a clear pseudonym. The earliest versions of the novel exist only in handwritten scripts; the first block-printed book was released only in 1610. The more complete version today comprises one hundred chapters.

Jin Ping Mei is sometimes considered to be the fifth classical novel after the Four Great Classical Novels. It is the first full-length Chinese fictional work to depict human sexuality in a graphically explicit manner, and as such has notoriety in China akin to Fanny Hill or Lady Chatterley's Lover in English.

Jin Ping Mei takes its name from the three central female characters - Pan Jinlian (whose name means "Golden Lotus"); Li Ping'er (literally, "Little Vase"), a concubine of Ximen Qing; and Pang Chunmei ("Spring plum blossoms"), a young maid who rose to power within the family.

Plot

The novel describes, in great detail, the downfall of the Ximen household during the years 1111–27 (during the Northern Song Dynasty). The story centers on Ximen Qing 西門慶, a corrupt social climber and the Lustful merchant who is wealthy enough to marry a consort of wives and concubines.

A key episode of the novel, the seduction of the adulterous Pan Jinlian, occurs early in the book and is taken from an episode from Water Margin. After secretly murdering the husband of Pan, Ximen Qing marries her as one of his wives. The story follows the domestic sexual struggles of the women within his clan as they clamor for prestige and influence amidst the gradual decline of the Ximen clan.

Evaluation

For centuries identified as pornographic and officially banned most of the time, the book has nevertheless been read surreptitiously by much of the educated class. Only since the Qing Dynasty has it been re-evaluated as literature. Structurally taut, full of classical Chinese poetry, and surprisingly mature even as early fiction, it also deals with larger sociological issues such as the role of women in ancient Chinese society, and sexual politics while functioning concurrently as a novel of manners and an allegory of human corruption.

Acclaimed Qing critic Zhang Zhupo described it as 'the most incredible book existing under the heavens', and in the 20th century, the influential author Lu Xun also held it in great esteem.

The story contains a surprising number of descriptions of sexual toys and coital techniques that would be considered fetish today, as well as a large number of bawdy jokes and oblique but still titillating sexual euphemisms. Critics have argued that the highly sexual descriptions are essential, and have exerted what has been termed a "liberating" influence on other Chinese novels that deal with sexuality, most notably the Dream of the Red Chamber.

Little is known about the author except for some conjectures that he may have been a Taoist priest who wrote to expose the disintegrating morality and corruption of the late Ming Dynasty.

Connection to Water Margin

  • The beginning chapter is based on an episode from "Tiger Slayer" (Wu Song) from Water Margin. The story is about Wu Song avenging the murder of his older brother Wu Da Lang.
  • In Water Margin, Ximen Qing was punished at the end by being brutally killed in broad daylight by Wu Song. In Jin Ping Mei, however, Ximen Qing dies a horrible death due to an accidental overdose of aphrodisiac pills.

English translations

The Golden Lotus (1939), translated by Clement Egerton with the assistance of the celebrated Chinese novelist Lao She, who because of the nature of the novel, refused to claim any credit for its English version. The translation is a classic of its time and is very readable today. It was an expurgated, though complete, version. Some of the more explicit parts were rendered into Latin.

  • Clement Egerton trans., The Golden Lotus, London, 1938, 4 vols.

David Tod Roy's translation, published by Princeton University Press, is considered the best English version. However, to date it remains incomplete: only three of a projected five volumes have been published.

  • The Plum in the Golden Vase, or Chin P'ing Mei: Volume One: The Gathering (1993)
  • The Plum in the Golden Vase, or Chin P'ing Mei: Volume Two: The Rivals (2001)
  • The Plum in the Golden Vase, or Chin P'ing Mei: Volume Three: The Aphrodisiac (2006)

The graphic novelist Magnus (Roberto Raviola)) created a truncated graphic novel loosely based on the Jin Ping Mei, entitled the 110 Sexpills which focused on the sexual exploits and eventual downfall of Ximen Qing (albeit with the Ximen surname being taken as the character's given name and vice versa).

Zi-Yun Wei is a noted scholar best known for his study of the Jin Ping Mei

References

External links

Chain-09.png
Jump to: Main PageMicropediaMacropediaIconsTime LineHistoryLife LessonsLinksHelp
Chat roomsWhat links hereCopyright infoContact informationCategory:Root