Mouse vs. cat in Chinese literature : tales and commentary

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Bibliographic Information

Title
"Mouse vs. cat in Chinese literature : tales and commentary"
Statement of Responsibility
translated and introduced by Wilt L. Idema ; foreword by Haiyan Lee
Publisher
  • University of Washington Press
Publication Year
  • c2019
Book size
23 cm
Series Name / No
  • : pbk
Other Title
  • Mouse versus cat in Chinese literature

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Notes

Includes bibliographical references (p. 215-237) and index

Summary: "Wilt Idema presents Chinese tales about cats and mice, situating them in the Chinese literary tradition as a whole, and within Chinese imaginative depictions of animals. In the literatures of the ancient and modern Near East, South Asia, and medieval Europe, animal fables exhibited a range of anthropomorphic views, but Chinese literature is notable for its relative paucity of extended animal tales and rarity of talking animals. From ancient Egypt to China, rodents have long been vilified as thieves of grain in agrarian society, in perennial war with felines. Through varied depictions of the cat-mouse relationship, this set of tales allows to reader to consider the metaphorical roles of these animals in the Chinese literary imagination and to ponder their unusually prominent--and verbal--role in these stories. Of central focus is the legal case of the mouse against the cat in the underworld court of King Yama, a popular topic in the traditional ballad literature of late-imperial China and of present-

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