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Dream of the Red Chamber

Dream of the Red Chamber or The Story of the Stone is an 18th-century Chinese novel authored by Cao Xueqin, considered to be one of the Four Great Classical Novels of Chinese literature. It is known for its psychological scope and its observation of the worldview, aesthetics, lifestyles, and social relations of High Qing China.[1]

Dream of the Red Chamber
A scene from the novel, painted by Xu Baozhuan (1810–1873)
AuthorCao Xueqin
Original title紅樓夢
CountryChina
LanguageChinese
GenreFamily saga
Publication date
  • Mid-18th century (manuscripts)
  • 1791 (first printed edition)
Published in English
1868, 1892; 1973–1980 (first complete English translation)
895.1348
Dream of the Red Chamber
"Dream of the Red Chamber" in traditional (top) and simplified (bottom) Chinese characters
Traditional Chinese紅樓夢
Simplified Chinese红楼梦
Alternative Chinese name
Traditional Chinese石頭記
Simplified Chinese石头记
Literal meaning"Records of the Stone"

The intricate strands of its plot depict the rise and decline of a family much like Cao's own and, by extension, of the dynasty itself. Cao depicts the power of the father over the family, but the novel is intended to be a memorial to the women he knew in his youth: friends, relatives and servants. At a more profound level, the author explores religious and philosophical questions, and the writing style includes echoes of the plays and novels of the late Ming, as well as poetry from earlier periods.[2]

Cao apparently began composing it in the 1740s and worked on it until his death in 1763 or 1764. Copies of his uncompleted manuscript circulated in Cao's social circle, under the title Story of a Stone, in slightly varying versions of eighty chapters. It was not published until nearly three decades after Cao's death, when Gao E and Cheng Weiyuan (程偉元) edited the first and second printed editions under the title Dream of the Red Chamber from 1791 to 1792, adding 40 chapters. It is still debated whether Gao and Cheng composed these chapters themselves and the extent to which they did or did not represent Cao's intentions. Their 120-chapter edition became the most widely circulated version.[3] The title has also been translated as Red Chamber Dream and A Dream of Red Mansions. Redology is the field of study devoted to the novel.

Language edit

The novel is composed in written vernacular (baihua) rather than Classical Chinese (wenyan). Cao Xueqin was well versed in Chinese poetry and in Classical Chinese, having written tracts in the semi-wenyan style, while the novel's dialogue is written in the Beijing Mandarin dialect, which was to become the basis of modern spoken Chinese. In the early 20th century, lexicographers used the text to establish the vocabulary of the new standardised language and reformers used the novel to promote the written vernacular.[4]

History edit

Textual history edit

Dream of the Red Chamber has a complicated textual history that scholars and historians have long debated.[5] It is known with certainty that Cao Xueqin began writing Dream of the Red Chamber in the 1740s.[5] Cao was a member of a prominent Chinese family that had served the Manchu emperors of the Qing dynasty but whose fortunes had begun to decline. By the time of Cao's death in 1763 or 1764, hand-copied manuscripts of the novel's first 80 chapters had begun circulating, and Cao may have made early drafts of the remaining chapters.[5] These hand-copied manuscripts circulated first among his personal friends and a growing circle of aficionados, then eventually on the open market where they sold for large sums of money.[6][7]

The first printed version of Dream of the Red Chamber, published by Cheng Weiyuan and Gao E in 1791, contains edits and revisions that Cao never authorized.[3] It is possible that Cao destroyed the last chapters[8] or that at least parts of Cao's original ending were incorporated into the 120 chapter Cheng-Gao versions,[9] with Gao E's "careful emendations" of Cao's draft.[10]

"Rouge" versions edit

 
A page from the "Jimao manuscript" (one of the Rouge versions) of the novel, 1759.[11]

Up until 1791, the novel circulated in hand-copied manuscripts. Even amongst some 12 independent surviving manuscripts, small differences in some characters, rearrangements and possible rewritings cause the texts to vary a little. The earliest manuscripts end abruptly at the latest at the 80th chapter. The earlier versions contain comments and annotations in red or black ink from unknown commentators. These commentators' remarks reveal much about the author as a person, and it is now believed that some of them may even be members of Cao Xueqin's own family. The most prominent commentator is Zhiyanzhai, who revealed much of the interior structuring of the work and the original manuscript ending, now lost. These manuscripts, the most textually reliable versions, are known as "rouge versions" (zhī běn 脂本).

The early 80 chapters brim with prophecies and dramatic foreshadowings that give hints as to how the book would continue. For example, it is obvious that Lin Daiyu will eventually die in the course of the novel; that Baoyu and Baochai will marry; that Baoyu will become a monk. A branch of Redology, known as tànyì xué (探佚學), is focused on recovering the lost manuscript ending, based on the commentators' annotations in the Rouge versions, as well as the internal foreshadowings in the earlier 80 chapters.

Several early manuscripts are still extant. At the present, the "Jiaxu manuscript" (dating to 1754) is held in the Shanghai Museum, the "Jimao manuscript" (1759) is held in the National Library of China, and the "Gengchen manuscript" (1760) is held in the library of Peking University. Beijing Normal University and the Institute of Oriental Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences both also held manuscripts of the novel that predate the first printed edition of 1791.

Cheng–Gao versions edit

In 1791, Gao E and Cheng Weiyuan brought out the novel's first printed edition. This was also the first "complete" edition of The Story of the Stone, which they printed as the Illustrated Dream of the Red Chamber (Xiùxiàng Hóng Lóu Mèng 繡像紅樓夢). While the original Rouge manuscripts have eighty chapters, the 1791 edition completed the novel in 120 chapters. The first 80 chapters were edited from the Rouge versions, but the last 40 were newly published.[12]

In 1792, Cheng and Gao published a second edition correcting editorial errors of the 1791 version. In the 1791 prefaces, Cheng claimed to have put together an ending based on the author's working manuscripts.[10]

The debate over the last 40 chapters and the 1791–92 prefaces continues to this day. Many modern scholars believe these chapters were a later addition. Hu Shih, in his Studies on A Dream of the Red Chamber (1921) argued that these chapters were written by Gao E, citing the foreshadowing of the main characters' fates in Chapter 5, which differs from the ending of the 1791 Cheng-Gao version. However, during the mid-20th century, the discovery of a 120 chapter manuscript that dates well before 1791 further complicated the questions regarding Gao E and Cheng Weiyuan's involvement—whether they simply edited or actually wrote the continuation of the novel.[13] Though it is unclear if the last 40 chapters of the discovered manuscript contained the original works of Cao, Irene Eber found the discovery "seems to confirm Cheng and Gao's claim that they merely edited a complete manuscript, consisting of 120 chapters, rather than actually writing a portion of the novel".[13]

The book is usually published and read in Cheng Weiyuan and Gao E's 120 chapter version. Some modern editions, such as Zhou Ruchang's, do not include the last 40 chapters.

In 2014, three researchers using data analysis of writing styles announced that "Applying our method to the Cheng–Gao version of Dream of the Red Chamber has led to convincing if not irrefutable evidence that the first 80 chapters and the last 40 chapters of the book were written by two different authors."[14]

In 2020, Zhang Qingshan, the president of the academic organization Society of the Dream of the Red Chamber, stated that although the authorship of the novel's last 40 chapters remains uncertain, it is unlikely Gao E was the one who wrote them.[15]

Plot summary edit

 
A piece from a series of brush paintings by the Qing dynasty artist Sun Wen (1818–1904), depicting a scene from the novel.

In the novel's frame story, a sentient Stone, left over when the goddess Nüwa mended the heaven aeons ago, wants to enjoy the pleasures of the "red dust" (the mundane world). The Stone begs a Taoist priest and a Buddhist monk to take it with them to see the world. The Stone, along with a companion (in Cheng-Gao versions they are merged into the same character), is then given a chance to learn from human existence, and enters the mortal realm, reborn as Jia Baoyu ("Precious Jade") – thus "The Story of the Stone".

The novel provides a detailed, episodic record of life in the two branches of the wealthy, aristocratic Jia () clan—the Rongguo House (榮國府) and the Ningguo House (寧國府)—who reside in large, adjacent family compounds in the capital. The capital, however, is not named, and the first chapter insists that the dynasty is indeterminate.[16] The ancestors of the two families were made Chinese nobility and given imperial titles, and as the novel begins the houses are two of the most illustrious families in the city. One of the Jia daughters is made a Royal Consort, and to suitably receive her, the family constructs the Daguanyuan, a lush landscaped garden, the setting for much of subsequent action. The novel describes the Jias' wealth and influence in great naturalistic detail, and charts the Jias' fall from the height of their prestige, following some thirty main characters and over four hundred minor ones.

As the carefree adolescent male heir of the family, Baoyu in this life has a special bond with his sickly cousin Lin Daiyu, who shares his love of music and poetry. Baoyu, however, is predestined to marry another cousin, Xue Baochai, whose grace and intelligence exemplify an ideal woman, but with whom he lacks an emotional connection. The romantic rivalry and friendship among the three characters against the backdrop of the family's declining fortunes form the central story.

A series of paintings by Fei Danxu (1801–1850) depicting scenes from the novel.

Characters edit

 
1889 woodcut print depicting Xue Baochai chasing butterflies (chapter 27).

Dream of the Red Chamber contains an extraordinarily large number of characters: nearly 40 are considered major characters, and there are over 400 additional ones.[17] The novel is also known for the complex portraits of its many women characters.[18] According to Lu Xun in the appendix to A Brief History of Chinese Fiction, Dream of the Red Chamber broke every conceivable thought and technique in traditional Chinese fiction; its realistic characterization presents thoroughly human characters who are neither "wholly good nor wholly bad", but who seem to inhabit part of the real world.[19]

The names of the characters present a challenge to the translator, since many of them convey meaning. David Hawkes left the names of the masters, mistresses, and their family members in pinyin (Jia Zheng and Lady Wang, for instance); translated the meanings of the servants's names, (such as Aroma and Skybright); and put the names of the Daoists and Buddhists into Latin (Sapientia); and those of actors and actresses into French.[20]

Jia Baoyu and the Twelve Beauties of Jinling edit

  • Jia Baoyu (traditional Chinese: 賈寶玉; simplified Chinese: 贾宝玉; pinyin: Jiǎ Bǎoyù; Wade–Giles: Chia Pao-yu; lit. 'Precious Jade')
    The main protagonist is about 12 or 13 years old when introduced in the novel.[21] The adolescent son of Jia Zheng and his wife, Lady Wang, and born with a piece of luminescent jade in his mouth (the Stone), Baoyu is the heir apparent to the Rongguo House. Frowned on by his strict Confucian father, Baoyu reads Zhuangzi and Romance of the Western Chamber on the sly, rather than the Four Books of classic Chinese education. Baoyu is highly intelligent, but dislikes the fawning bureaucrats who frequent his father's house. A sensitive and compassionate individual, he has a special relationship with many of the women in the house.
  • Lin Daiyu (林黛玉; Lín Dàiyù; Lin Tai-yu; 'Blue-black Jade')
    Jia Baoyu's younger first cousin and his true love. She is the daughter of Lin Ruhai (林如海), an official in the lucrative Yangzhou salt commission, and Lady Jia Min (賈敏), Baoyu's paternal aunt. She is an icon of spirituality and intelligence: beautiful, sentimental, sarcastic, self-assured, an accomplished poet, but subject to fits of jealousy. She suffers from a respiratory ailment. In the frame story, Baoyu, in his previous incarnation as the Deity Shenying, watered the Fairy Crimson Pearl, Daiyu's incarnation. The purpose of her mortal reincarnation is to repay Baoyu with tears. The novel proper starts in Chapter 3 with Daiyu's arrival at the Rongguo House shortly after the death of her mother.[22]
  • Xue Baochai (薛寶釵; 薛宝钗; Xuē Bǎochāi; Hsueh Pao-chai; 'Jeweled Hair Pin')
    Jia Baoyu's other first cousin. The only daughter of Aunt Xue (薛姨媽), sister to Baoyu's mother, Baochai is a foil to Daiyu. Where Daiyu is unconventional and sincere, Baochai is worldly-wise and very tactful: a model Chinese feudal maiden. The novel describes her as beautiful and ambitious. Baochai has a round face, fair skin, large eyes, and, some would say, a more voluptuous figure in contrast to Daiyu's slender willowy daintiness. Baochai carries a golden locket with her which contains words given to her in childhood by a Buddhist monk. Baochai's golden locket and Baoyu's jade contain inscriptions that appear to complement one another perfectly in the material world. Her marriage to Baoyu is seen in the book as predestined, but ultimately fails due to Baoyu's love for Daiyu persisting after her death.
  • Jia Yuanchun (賈元春; 贾元春; Jiǎ Yuánchūn; Chia Yuan-chun; 'First Spring')
    Baoyu's elder sister by about a decade. Originally one of the ladies-in-waiting in the imperial palace, Yuanchun later becomes an Imperial Consort, having impressed the Emperor with her virtue and learning. Her illustrious position as a favorite of the Emperor marks the height of the Jia family's powers. Despite her prestigious position, Yuanchun feels imprisoned within the imperial palace, and dies at the age of forty. The name of four sisters together "Yuan-Ying-Tan-Xi" is a homophone with "Supposed to sigh".
  • Jia Tanchun (賈探春; 贾探春; Jiǎ Tànchūn; Chia Tan-chun; 'Seeking Spring')
    Baoyu's younger half-sister by Concubine Zhao. Extremely outspoken, she is almost as capable as Wang Xifeng. Wang Xifeng herself compliments her privately, but laments that she was "born in the wrong womb", since concubine children are not respected as much as those by first wives. She is also a very talented poet. Tanchun is nicknamed "Rose" for her beauty and her prickly personality. She later marries into a military family on the South Sea far away from home.
  • Shi Xiangyun (史湘雲; 史湘云; Shǐ Xiāngyún; Shih Hsiang-yun; 'Xiang River Clouds')
    Jia Baoyu's younger second cousin. Grandmother Jia's grandniece. Orphaned in infancy, she grows up under her wealthy paternal uncle and aunt who treats her unkindly. In spite of this Xiangyun is openhearted and cheerful. A comparatively androgynous beauty, Xiangyun looks good in men's clothes (once she put on Baoyu's clothes and Grandmother Jia thought she was a man), and loves to drink. She is forthright and without tact, but her forgiving nature takes the sting from her casually truthful remarks. She is well educated and as talented a poet as Daiyu or Baochai. Her young husband dies shortly after their marriage. She vows to be a faithful widow for the rest of her life.
  • Miaoyu (妙玉; Miàoyù; Miao-yu; 'Wonderful/Clever Jade'; Hawkes/Minford translation: Adamantina)
    A young nun from Buddhist cloisters of the Rong-guo house. Although beautiful and learned, she is aloof, haughty, unsociable, and has an obsession with cleanliness. The novel says she was compelled by her illness to become a nun, and shelters herself under the nunnery to dodge political affairs. Her fate is not known after her abduction by bandits.
  • Jia Yingchun (賈迎春; 贾迎春; Jiǎ Yíngchūn; Chia Ying-chun; 'Welcoming Spring')
    Second female family member of the generation of the Jia household after Yuanchun, Yingchun is the daughter of Jia She, Baoyu's uncle and therefore his elder first cousin. A kind-hearted, weak-willed person, Yingchun is said to have a "wooden" personality and seems rather apathetic toward all worldly affairs. Although very pretty and well-read, she does not compare in intelligence and wit to any of her cousins. Yingchun's most famous trait, it seems, is her unwillingness to meddle in the affairs of her family. Eventually Yingchun marries an official of the imperial court, her marriage being merely one of her father's desperate attempts to raise the declining fortunes of the Jia family. The newly married Yingchun becomes a victim of domestic abuse and constant violence at the hands of her cruel, abusive husband.
  • Jia Xichun (賈惜春; 贾惜春; Jiǎ Xīchūn; Chia Hsi-chun; 'Treasuring Spring')
    Baoyu's younger cousin from the Ningguo House, but brought up in the Rongguo House. A gifted painter, she is also a devout Buddhist. She is the young sister of Jia Zhen, head of the Ningguo House. At the end of the novel, after the fall of the house of Jia, she gives up her worldly concerns and becomes a Buddhist nun. She is the second youngest of Jinling's Twelve Beauties, described as a pre-teen in most parts of the novel.
  • Wang Xifeng (王熙鳳; 王熙凤; Wáng Xīfèng; Wang Hsi-feng; 'Splendid Phoenix'), alias Sister Feng.
    Baoyu's elder cousin-in-law, young wife to Jia Lian (who is Baoyu's paternal first cousin), niece to Lady Wang. Xifeng is hence related to Baoyu both by blood and marriage. A handsome woman, Xifeng is capable, clever, humorous, and, at times, vicious and cruel. Undeniably the most worldly woman in the novel, Xifeng is in charge of the daily running of the Rongguo household and wields economic as well as political power within the family. Xifeng keeps both Lady Wang and Grandmother Jia entertained with her jokes and chatter. By playing the role of the perfect filial daughter-in-law, she rules the household with an iron fist. Xifeng can be kind-hearted toward the poor and helpless or cruel enough to kill. She makes a fortune by investing in loan sharking rather than maintaining the family estate and brings about the downfall of the family. She dies soon after the family assets are seized by the government.
  • Jia Qiaojie (賈巧姐; 贾巧姐; Jiǎ Qiǎojiě; Chia Chiao-chieh)
    Wang Xifeng's and Jia Lian's daughter. She is a child through much of the novel. After the fall of the house of Jia, in the version of Gao E and Cheng Weiyuan, she marries the son of a wealthy rural family introduced by Granny Liu and goes on to lead a happy, uneventful life in the countryside.
  • Li Wan (李紈; 李纨; Lǐ Wán; Li Wan; 'White Silk')
    Baoyu's elder sister-in-law, widow of Baoyu's deceased elder brother, Jia Zhu (賈珠). Her primary task is to bring up her son Lan and watch over her female cousins. The novel portrays Li Wan, a young widow in her late twenties, as a mild-mannered woman with no wants or desires, the perfect Confucian ideal of a proper mourning widow. She eventually attains high social status due to the success of her son at the Imperial Exams, but the novel sees her as a tragic figure because she wasted her youth upholding the strict standards of behavior.
  • Qin Keqing (秦可卿; Qín Kěqīng; Ch'in K'o-ching;a homophone with "look down upon love")
    Daughter-in-law to Jia Zhen. Of all the characters in the novel, the circumstances of her life and early death are amongst the most mysterious. Apparently a very beautiful and flirtatious woman, she carried on an affair with her father-in-law and dies before the second quarter of the novel. Her bedroom is bedecked with priceless artifacts belonging to extremely sensual women, both historical and mythological. In her bed, Bao Yu first travels to the Land of Illusion where he has a sexual encounter with Two-In-One, who represents Xue Baochai and Lin Daiyu. Two-in-One's name is also Keqing, making Qin Keqing also a significant character in Bao Yu's sexual experience. The original twelve songs hint that Qin Keqing hanged herself.


The Twelve Beauties of Jinling
Portraits of the main female characters of the novel Dream of the Red Chamber, as they are known as the Twelve Beauties of Jinling, by an anonymous artist of the Qing dynasty, collection of the Posner Center of Carnegie Mellon University.

Other main characters edit

  • Grandmother Jia (賈母; 贾母; Jiǎmǔ), née Shi.
    Also called the Matriarch or the Dowager, the daughter of Marquis Shi of Jinling. Grandmother to both Baoyu and Daiyu, she is the highest living authority in the Rongguo house and the oldest and most respected of the entire clan, yet also a doting person. She has two sons, Jia She and Jia Zheng, and a daughter, Min, Daiyu's mother. Daiyu is brought to the house of the Jias at the insistence of Grandmother Jia, and she helps Daiyu and Baoyu bond as childhood playmates and, later, kindred spirits. She distributes her savings among her relatives after the seizure of their properties by the government shortly before her death.
  • Jia She (賈赦; 贾赦; Jiǎ Shè; Chia Sheh)
    The elder son of the Dowager. He is the father of Jia Lian and Jia Yingchun. He is a treacherous and greedy man, and a womanizer. He is jealous of his younger brother whom his mother favors. He is later stripped of his title and banished by the government.
  • Jia Zheng (賈政; 贾政; Jiǎ Zhèng; Chia Cheng)
    Baoyu's father, the younger son of the Dowager. He is a disciplinarian and Confucian scholar. Afraid his one surviving heir will turn bad, he imposes strict rules on his son, and uses occasional corporal punishment. He has a wife, Lady Wang, and one concubine: Zhao. He is a Confucian scholar who tries to live life as an upright and decent person, but out of touch with reality and a hands-off person at home and in court.
  • Jia Lian (賈璉; 贾琏; Jiǎ Liǎn; Chia Lien)
    Xifeng's husband and Baoyu's paternal elder cousin, a notorious womanizer whose numerous affairs cause much trouble with his jealous wife, including affairs with men that are not known by his wife. His pregnant concubine (Second Sister You) eventually dies by his wife's engineering. He and his wife are in charge of most hiring and monetary allocation decisions, and often fight over this power. He is a cad with a flawed character but still has a conscience.
  • Xiangling (香菱; Xiāng Líng; 'Fragrant Water caltrop'; Hawkes/Minford translation: Caltrop) – the Xues' maid, born Zhen Yinglian (甄英蓮, a homophone with "deserving pity"), the kidnapped and lost daughter of Zhen Shiyin (甄士隱, a homophone with "Hiding the truth"), the country gentleman in Chapter 1. Her name is changed to Qiuling (秋菱) by Xue Pan's spoiled wife, Xia Jingui (夏金桂) who is jealous of her and tries to poison her. Xue Pan makes her the lady of the house after Jingui's death. She soon dies while giving birth.
  • Ping'er (平兒; 'Peace'; Hawkes/Minford translation: Patience)
    Xifeng's chief maid and personal confidante; also concubine to Xifeng's husband, Jia Lian. Originally Xifeng's maid in the Wang household, she follows Xifeng as part of her dowry when Xifeng marries into the Jia household. She handles her troubles with grace, assists Xifeng capably and appears to have the respect of most of the household servants. She is also one of the very few people who can get close to Xifeng. She wields considerable power in the house as Xifeng's most trusted assistant, but uses her power sparingly and justly. She is supremely loyal to her mistress, but more soft-hearted and sweet-tempered.
  • Xue Pan (薛蟠; Xuē Pán; Hsueh Pan; 'to Coil (as a dragon)')
    Baochai's older brother, a dissolute, idle rake who was a local bully in Jinling. He was known for his amorous exploits with both men and women. Not particularly well educated, he once killed a man over a servant-girl (Xiangling) and had the manslaughter case hushed up with money.
  • Granny Liu (劉姥姥; 刘姥姥; Liú Lǎolao)
    A country rustic and distant relation to the Wang family, who provides a comic contrast to the ladies of the Rongguo House during two visits. She eventually rescues Qiaojie from her maternal uncle, who wanted to sell her.
  • Lady Wang (王夫人; Wáng Fūren)
    A Buddhist, primary wife of Jia Zheng. Daughter of one of the four most prominent families of Jinling. Because of her purported ill-health, she hands over the running of the household to her niece, Xifeng, as soon as the latter marries into the Jia household, although she retains overall control over Xifeng's affairs so that the latter always has to report to her. Although Lady Wang appears to be a kind mistress and a doting mother, she can in fact be cruel and ruthless when her authority is challenged. She pays a great deal of attention to Baoyu's maids to make sure that Baoyu does not develop romantic relationships with them.
  • Aunt Xue (薛姨媽; 薛姨妈; Xuē Yímā), née Wang
    Baoyu's maternal aunt, mother to Pan and Baochai, sister to Lady Wang. She is kindly and affable for the most part, but finds it hard to control her unruly son.
  • Hua Xiren (花襲人; 花袭人; Huā Xírén; 'Flower Assails Men'; Hawkes/Minford translation: Aroma)
    Baoyu's principal maid and his unofficial concubine. While she still has standing as the Dowager's maid, the Dowager gave her to Baoyu so, in practice, Xiren is his maid. Considerate and forever worried about Baoyu, she is the partner of his first adolescent sexual encounter in the real world in Chapter 5. After Baoyu's disappearance, she unknowingly marries actor Jiang Yuhan, one of Baoyu's friends.
 
Qingwen, painted by Xu Baozhuan
  • Qingwen (晴雯; Qíngwén; 'Sunny Multicolored Clouds'; Hawkes/Minford translation: Skybright)
    Baoyu's personal maid. Brash, haughty and the most beautiful maid in the household, Qingwen is said to resemble Daiyu very strongly. Of all of Baoyu's maids, she is the only one who dares to argue with Baoyu when reprimanded, but is also extremely devoted to him. She is disdainful of Xiren's attempt to use her sexual relation with Baoyu to raise her status in the family. Lady Wang later suspected her of having an affair with Baoyu and publicly dismisses her on that account; angry at the unfair treatment and of the indignities and slanders that attended her as a result, Qingwen dies of an illness shortly after leaving the Jia household.
  • Yuanyang (鴛鴦; 鸳鸯; Yuānyang; 'Pair of Mandarin Ducks'; Hawkes/Minford translation: Faithful)
    The Dowager's chief maid. She rejects a marriage proposal (as concubine) to the lecherous Jia She, Grandmother Jia's eldest son, and commits suicide right after the Dowager's death.
  • Mingyan (茗煙; 茗烟; Míngyān; 'Tea Vapor'; Hawkes/Minford translation: Tealeaf)
    Baoyu's page boy. Knows his master like the back of his hand.
  • Zijuan (紫鵑; 紫鹃; Zǐjuān; Tzu-chuan; 'Purple Rhododendron or Cuckoo'; Hawkes/Minford translation: Nightingale)
    Daiyu's faithful maid, ceded by the Dowager to her granddaughter. She later becomes a nun to serve Jia Xichun.
  • Xueyan (雪雁; Xuěyàn; Hawkes/Minford translation: Snowgoose)
    Daiyu's other maid. She came with Daiyu from Yangzhou, and comes across as a young, sweet girl. She is asked to accompany the veiled bride Baochai to trick Baoyu into believing that he is marrying Daiyu.
  • Concubine Zhao (趙姨娘; 赵姨娘; Zhào Yíniáng)
    A concubine of Jia Zheng. She is the mother of Jia Tanchun and Jia Huan, Baoyu's half-siblings. She longs to be the mother of the head of the household, which she does not achieve. She plots to murder Baoyu and Xifeng with black magic, and it is believed that her plot cost her own life.

Notable minor characters edit

 
A scene from the story, painted by Xu Baozhuan
  • Qin Zhong (秦鐘, a homophone with "great lover") – His elder sister is Qin Keqing, Baoyu's nephew's wife, and so he is technically a generation younger than Baoyu. Both he and Qin Keqing are the adopted children of Qin Ye(秦業). The two boys enroll in the Jia clan's school together and he becomes Baoyu's best friend. The novel leaves open the possibility that things might have gone beyond innocent friendship. Qin Zhong and the novice Zhineng (智能, "Intelligent"; "Sapientia" in the Hawkes translation) fall in love but Qin Zhong dies soon after from a combination of his father's severe beating, sexual exhaustion, grief and remorse.[23] One commentator writes that Qin Zhong is a pun for qingzhong (passion incarnate), and that his sister Qinshi initiates Baoyu into heterosexual relations in his dream and Qin Zhong initiates him into homosexual ones.[24]
  • Jia Yucun (贾雨村) — The childhood tutor of Lin Daiyu. Originally a poor scholar, he became a prefect with the help of Zhen Shiyin before being fired for corruption. He later connected himself with his distant relatives in the Jia family through the Lin family and was reinstated as prefect.
  • Jia Lan (賈蘭) – Son of Baoyu's deceased older brother Jia Zhu and his virtuous wife Li Wan. Jia Lan is an appealing child throughout the book and at the end succeeds in the imperial examinations to the credit of the family.
  • Jia Zhen (賈珍) – Head of the Ningguo House, the elder branch of the Jia family. He has a wife, Lady You, a younger sister, Jia Xichun, and many concubines. He is extremely greedy and the unofficial head of the clan, since his father has retired. He has an adulterous affair with his daughter-in-law, Qin Keqing.
  • Lady You (尤氏) – Wife of Jia Zhen. She is the sole mistress of the Ningguo House.
  • Jia Rong (賈蓉) – Jia Zhen's son. He is the husband of Qin Keqing. An exact copy of his father, he is the Cavalier of the Imperial Guards.
  • Xue Baoqin (薛寶琴) – The paternal cousin of Xue Baochai. Depicted as extremely beautiful and talented. Grandmother Jia originally sought to betroth her to Jia Baoyu.
  • Second Sister You (尤二姐) – Jia Lian takes her in secret as his lover. Though a kept woman before she was married, after her wedding she becomes a faithful and doting wife. Because of Wang Xifeng's intrigue, she finally kills herself by swallowing a large piece of gold.
  • Liu Xianglian (柳湘蓮) – A descendant of the Liu family and an amateur actor. A bold man, he is good friends with Jia Baoyu and forms a brotherhood with Xue Pan.
  • Lady Xing (邢夫人) – Jia She's wife. She is Jia Lian's stepmother.
  • Xing Xiuyan (邢岫烟) – The niece of Lady Xing. She is intelligent and courteous, but is a modest beauty due to her and her family's financial struggles.
  • Jia Huan (賈環) – Son of Concubine Zhao. He and his mother are both reviled by the family, and he carries himself like a kicked dog. He shows his malignant nature by spilling candle wax, intending to blind his half-brother Baoyu.
  • Sheyue (麝月; Hawkes/Minford translation: Musk) — Baoyu's main maid after Xiren and Qingwen. She is beautiful and caring, a perfect complement to Xiren.
  • Qiutong (秋桐) — Jia Lian's other concubine. Originally a maid of Jia She, she is given to Jia Lian as a concubine. She is a very proud and arrogant woman.
  • Sister Sha (傻大姐) – A maid who does rough work for the Dowager. She is guileless but amusing and caring. In the Gao E and Cheng Weiyuan version, she unintentionally informs Daiyu of Baoyu's secret marriage plans.

Themes edit

Honglou meng is a book about enlightenment [or awakening]. ... A man in his life experiences several decades of winter and summer. The most sagacious and wise is certainly not submerged in considerations of loss and gain. However, the experiences of prosperity and decline, coming together and dispersing [of family members and friends] are too common; how can his mind be like wood and stone, without being moved by all this? In the beginning there is a profusion of intimate feelings, which is followed by tears and lamentations. Finally, there is a time when one feels that everything he does is futile. At this moment, how can he not be enlightened?

— A commentary on the novel by writer Jiang Shunyi, dated 1869[25]

The opening chapter of the novel describes a great stone archway and on either side a couplet is inscribed:

假作真時真亦假,
無為有處有還無。


Truth becomes fiction when the fiction's true;
Real becomes not-real where the unreal's real.

This couplet is later reiterated, however this time as:

假去真來真勝假,
無原有是有非無。


When Fiction departs and Truth appears, Truth prevails;
Though Not-real was once Real, the Real is never unreal.[26]

As one critic points out, the couplet signifies "not a hard and fast division between truth and falsity, reality and illusion, but the impossibility of making such distinctions in any world, fictional or actual."[27] It also symbolizes the peculiar Taoist religious tradition prevalent in Northern China since the Yuan dynasty as practiced in Cao's time, as well as Taoism's alternate roles in society such as doctrines for philosophical and intellectual rather than religious guidance and one of the schools of thought Buddhist sects in China syncretized with their own.[28] This theme is further reflected in the name of the main family, Jia (, pronounced jiǎ), which is a homophone with the character jiǎ , meaning false or fictitious; this is mirrored the surname of the other main family, Zhen (, pronounced zhēn), a homophone for the word "real" (). It is suggested that the novel is both a realistic reflection and a fictional or "dream" version of Cao's own family.

Early Chinese critics identified its two major themes as those of the nature of love, and of the transitoriness of earthly material values, as outlined in Buddhist and Taoist philosophies.[29] Later scholars echoed the philosophical aspects of love and its transcendent power as depicted in the novel.[30] One remarked that the novel is a remarkable example of the "dialectic of dream and reality, art and life, passion and enlightenment, nostalgia and knowledge."[31]

The novel also vividly depicts Chinese material culture, such as medicine, cuisine, tea culture, festivities, proverbs, mythology, Confucianism, Buddhism, Taoism, filial piety, opera, music, architecture, funeral rites, painting, classic literature and the Four Books. Among these, the novel is particularly notable for its grand use of poetry.[32]

Since the establishment of Cao Xueqin as the novel's author, its autobiographical aspects have come to the fore. Cao Xueqin's clan was similarly raided in real life, and suffered a steep decline. Marxist interpretation starting in the New Culture Movement saw the novel as exposing feudal society's corruption and emphasized the clashes between the classes. Since the 1980s, critics have embraced the novel's richness and aesthetics in a more multicultural context.[33]

In the title Hóng lóu Mèng (紅樓夢, literally "Red Chamber Dream"), "red chamber" can refer to the sheltered chambers where the daughters of a prominent family reside.[34] It also refers to Baoyu's dream in chapter five, set in a "red chamber", a dream where the fates of many of the characters are foreshadowed. "Mansion" is one of the definitions of the Chinese character "" (lóu), but the scholar Zhou Ruchang writes that in the phrase hónglóu it is more accurately translated as "chamber".[35]

The novel's mythological elements were also inspired by the services Cao was involved in at the Dongyue Temple.[28] The temple's most venerated gods came from Daoism, Chinese Buddhism, Tibetan Buddhism and shamanic traditions from various regions within and outside of China, and the book's spiritual themes, prose stylization, and portrayals of mythical figures were inspired by the traditional stories told about these deities and other oral temple traditions from Beijing.[28] Much of this folklore was already popular during the Yuan dynasty and was retold in various ways in Cao's era in the Qing dynasty.[28]

Reception and influence in modern era edit

 
The cover of a 1912 printed edition of the Youzheng version

In the late 19th century, Hong Lou Meng's influence was so pervasive that the reformer Liang Qichao attacked it along with another classic novel Water Margin as "incitement to robbery and lust", and for smothering the introduction of Western style novels, which he regarded as more socially responsible.[36] The eminent scholar Wang Guowei, however, achieved a new method of literary interpretation in an innovative and path-breaking 1904 essay which invoked the philosophy of Arthur Schopenhauer. Wang called the novel "the tragedy of tragedies", in contrast to the prosperous endings in most earlier drama and fiction.[37] Wang further proclaims the novel as "[W]orthy of being considered as the one great masterpiece in the realm of Chinese art."[38]

In the early 20th century, although the New Culture Movement took a critical view of the Confucian classics, the scholar Hu Shih used the tools of textual criticism to put the novel in an entirely different light, as a foundation for national culture. Hu and his students, Gu Jiegang and Yu Pingbo, first established that Cao Xueqin was the work's author. Taking the question of authorship seriously reflected a new respect for fiction, since the lesser forms of literature had not been traditionally ascribed to particular individuals.[39] Hu next built on Cai Yuanpei's investigations of the printing history of the early editions to prepare reliable reading texts. The final, and in some respects most important task, was to study the vocabulary and usage of Cao's Beijing dialect as a basis for Modern Mandarin.

In the 1920s, scholars and devoted readers developed Hongxue, or Redology into both a scholarly field and a popular avocation. Among the avid readers was the young Mao Zedong, who later claimed to have read the novel five times and praised it as one of China's greatest works of literature.[40] The influence of the novel's themes and style are evident in many modern Chinese prose works. The early 1950s was a rich period for Redology with publication of major studies by Yu Pingbo. Zhou Ruchang, who as a young scholar had come to the attention of Hu Shih in the late 1940s, published his first study in 1953, which became a best seller.[41] But in 1954 Mao personally criticized Yu Pingbo for his "bourgeois idealism" in failing to emphasize that the novel exposed the decadence of "feudal" society and the theme of class struggle. In the Hundred Flowers Campaign, Yu came under heavy criticism but the attacks were so extensive and full of quotations from his work that they spread Yu's ideas to many people who would not otherwise have known of their existence.[42]

During the Cultural Revolution, the novel initially came under fire, though it quickly regained its prestige in the following years. Zhou Ruchang resumed his lifework, eventually publishing more than sixty biographical and critical studies.[41] In 2006, Zhou, who had long distrusted Gao E's editions, and the novelist Liu Xinwu, author of popular studies of the novel, joined to produce a new 80 chapter version which Zhou had edited to eliminate the Cheng-Gao emendations. Liu completed an ending that was supposedly more true to Cao's original intent.[43] The novel continues to be influential on contemporary Chinese poets such as Middle Generation's An Qi, who paid homage to it in her poem To Cao Xueqin.[44]

Translations and reception in the West edit

... one of the great monuments of the world's literature ...

— Review of the Dream of the Red Chamber by Anthony West, The New Yorker[45]

Cao utilizes many levels of colloquial and literary language and incorporates forms of classic poetry that are integral to the novel, making it a major challenge to translate.[46] A 2014 study of fourteen translations of the novel concluded that the work is a "challenge even to the most resourceful of translators, and the process of rendering it into another language is bound to involve more translation problems, techniques, and principles than the process of rendering any other literary work." Accordingly, the aims and achievements of the translators differ widely.[47]

The first recorded translation into English was in 1812 by the Protestant missionary and sinologist Robert Morrison (1782–1834), who translated part of chapter four for the second volume of his unpublished 1812 book Horae Sinicae. In 1816, Morrison did publish a translation of a conversation from chapter 31 in his Chinese language textbook Dialogues and Detached Sentences in the Chinese Language. In 1819, the British diplomat and sinologist John Francis Davis (1795–1890) published a short excerpt in the London Journal Quarterly Review. Davis also published a poem from chapter 3 in the 1830 Transactions of the Royal Asiatic Society.[48] In 1842, Karl Gützlaff's article, "Hung Lau Mung, or Dreams in the Red Chamber", in the sixth volume of the "Chinese Repository", included translation and criticism of some passages.

A literal translation of selected passages was published for foreigners learning Chinese by the Presbyterian Mission Press of Ningbo in 1846.[49] Edward Charles Bowra of the Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs published a translation of the first eight chapters in 1868[50] and H. Bencraft Joly of the first fifty-six chapters in 1892.[51] The Reverend E.J. Eitel reviewed Joly's translation and condemned the novel, saying that Chinese read it "because of its wickedness." Herbert Giles, whom John Minford called "one of the more free-thinking British consular officers," took a more favorable view in a twenty-five page synopsis in 1885 that Minford calls still a "useful guide."[52] Giles further highlighted it in his A History of Chinese Literature in 1901.[53]

In 1928, Elfrida Hudson published a short introduction to the novel titled "An old, old story".[54] An abridged translation by Wang Chi-Chen which emphasized the central love story was published in 1929, with a preface by Arthur Waley. Waley said that "we feel most clearly the symbolic or universal value" of the characters in the passages which recount dreams. "Pao Yu", Waley continued, stands for "imagination and poetry" and his father for "all those sordid powers of pedantry and restriction which hamper the artist".[55] In a 1930 review of Wang's translation, Harry Clemons of The Virginia Quarterly Review wrote "This is a great novel", and along with the Romance of the Three Kingdoms, it "ranks foremost" among the novels of classic Chinese literature.[56] Although Clemons felt "meaning was only fragmentarily revealed" in the English translated prose and that "many of the incidents" and "much of the poetry" were omitted, he nevertheless thought "at any rate the effort to read The Dream of the Red Chamber is eminently worth making."[56] In 1958 Wang published an expansion on his earlier abridgement, though it was still truncated at 60 chapters.

The stream of translations and literary studies in the West grew steadily, building on Chinese language scholarship. The 1932 German translation by Franz Kuhn[57] was the basis of an abridged version, The Dream of the Red Chamber, by Florence and Isabel McHugh published in 1958,[58] and a later French version. Critic Anthony West wrote in The New Yorker in 1958 that the novel is to the Chinese "very much what The Brothers Karamazov is to Russian and Remembrance of Things Past is to French literature" and "it is beyond question one of the great novels of all literature."[45] Kenneth Rexroth in a 1958 review of the McHugh translation, describes the novel as among the "greatest works of prose fiction in all the history of literature", for it is "profoundly humane".[59] Bramwell Seaton Bonsall finished what is probably the first complete 120 chapter translation in the 1950s, Red Chamber Dream, but publication was abandoned when Penguin announced the Hawkes project. A typescript is available on the web.[60]

The respected and prolific Yang Hsien-yi was commissioned to translate the first complete English version. Though he confessed that this was his least favorite of the classic novels, Yang began work in 1961 and had finished roughly 100 chapters in 1964, when he was ordered to stop. He and his wife, Gladys Yang, were imprisoned on suspicion of espionage during the Cultural Revolution, but they finished the translation as a team after their release in 1974. It was published by Beijing Foreign Language Press as A Dream of Red Mansions, in three volumes, 1978–1980.[61] The second complete English translation to be published was by David Hawkes some century and a half after the first English translation. Hawkes was already a recognised redologist and had previously translated Chu Ci when Penguin Classics approached him in 1970 to make a translation which could appeal to English readers. After resigning from his professorial position, Hawkes published the first eighty chapters in three volumes (1973, 1977, 1980).[62]The Story of the Stone (1973–1980), the first eighty chapters translated by Hawkes and last forty by his son-in-law John Minford consists of five volumes and 2,339 pages of actual core text (not including Prefaces, Introductions and Appendices) and over 2,800 pages in total.[63] The word count of the Penguin Classics English translation is estimated at 845,000 words. In a 1980 review of the Hawkes and Minford translation in The New York Review of Books, Frederic Wakeman, Jr. described the novel as a "masterpiece" and the work of a "literary genius".[64] Cynthia L. Chennault of the University of Florida stated that "The Dream is acclaimed as one of the most psychologically penetrating novels of world literature."[65] The novel and its author have been described as among the most significant works of literature and literary figures of the past millennium.[66][67]

The sinologist Oldřich Král also undertook a Czech translation of the entire novel, Sen v červeném domě (Prague: Odeon, three volumes, 1986–1988). Slovak sinologist and philosopher Marina Čarnogurská translated into Slovak whole four volumes of the novel, Sen o Červenom pavilóne (Bratislava: Petrus, 2001–2003. ISBN 80-88939-25-9).

In 2014, an abridged English translation of Dream by writer Lin Yutang resurfaced in a Japanese library. Lin's translation, about half the length of the original, is reportedly not a literal one.[68]

In a study of fourteen translations into English, German, French, Spanish, Laurence K.P. Wong finds that some challenges to translation are "surmountable", some "insurmountable," though translators sometimes hit on "surprisingly happy versions that come very close to the original," Hawkes, however, normally came up with versions that are "accurate, ingenious, and delightful...." Hawkes recreates the meanings and sounds of the original with "remarkable precision, achieving much greater success than any one of his fellow translators in surmounting the limits of literary translation...."[69] Another scholar agreed that the Yang's translation is "literal" in the sense of rendering word for word, but argued that the Hawkes translation achieved what should be called a "higher level of literalness: in the sense of "text for text." That is, Hawkes tries to maintain the range and contrasting levels of usage of the original while the Yangs smooth out the language with a "plain international English" and add explanations in footnotes.[70]

Other scholars examined particular aspects of the Yangs' translation and the Hawkes and Minford translation. The names of some characters sound like the words for their personality traits, and some names serve as allusions. Hawkes conveys the communicative function of the names rather than lexical equivalence; for example, Huo Qi is homonymous with "the beginning of catastrophe", and Hawkes makes the English name "Calamity". Hawkes sometimes uses Italian/Sanskrit terms when Western Christian culture lacks a term for a concept.[71] Gladys Yang and Yang Hsien-yi prefer literal translation, informing readers of names' meanings through annotations. Zhu Jian-chun argued that Hawkes’ choice to simply translate certain names that are puns makes the author's intentions clearer, and that the Yangs' choice of transliteration leaves the meaning more elusive, even if the transliterated names are more believable as character names. Zhu questioned the Yangs' translation of "Dao Ren" as "reverend".[71] According to Barry Lee Reynolds and Chao-Chih Liao, the Yangs' version contains more faithful translations of religious expressions but is also less readable to English language readers.[72] Xuxiang Suo argued, “Hawkes successfully conveyed the original textual information to foreign readers with smooth and beautiful English, but the loss of Chinese culture-loaded information is inevitable. Mr. Yang mostly adopted the way of literal translation, trying his best to keep the true and idiomatic Chinese style and national tint."[73]

Sequels and continuations edit

Owing to its immense popularity, numerous sequels and continuations to the novel have been published, even during the Qing era. There are currently more than thirty recorded sequels or continuations to the novel, including modern ones.[74] Modern (post-1949) continuations tend to follow after the eightieth chapter, and include those by Zhang Zhi,[75] Zhou Yuqing,[76] Hu Nan[77] and Liu Xinwu.[78]

Adaptations edit

 
A scene from Dream of the Red Chamber as depicted in Chinese opera

At least fourteen cinematic adaptations of the Dream of the Red Chamber have been made, including the 1944 film directed by Bu Wancang, the 1977 Shaw Brothers adaptation starring Sylvia Chang and Brigitte Lin, and the 1988 film directed by Xie Tieli (谢铁骊) and Zhao Yuan (赵元). This last film took two years to prepare and three years to shoot, and remains, at 735 minutes, the longest Chinese film ever made.[79]

In 1981, Jiangsu Song and Dance Ensemble premiered a dance drama version of Dream of the Red Chamber. A reworked version was performed in 1982 in Beijing by China Opera and Dance Drama Theatre featuring lead dancer Chen Ailian.[80]

At least ten television adaptations have been produced (excluding numerous Chinese opera adaptations), and they include the renowned 1987 television series, which is regarded by many within China as being a near-definitive adaptation of the novel. It was initially somewhat controversial as few Redologists believed a television adaptation could do the novel full justice. Producer and director Wang Fulin's decision in employing non-professional young actors was vindicated as the television series gained enormous popularity in China. The series' success owes much to composer Wang Liping (王立平). He set many of the novel's classical verses to music, taking as long as four years to deliberate and complete his compositions. Other television versions include a 1996 Taiwanese series and a 2010 version directed by Fifth Generation director Li Shaohong.

Unlike the other great Chinese novels, particularly Romance of the Three Kingdoms and Journey to the West, the Dream of the Red Chamber has received little attention in the gaming world, with only two Chinese language visual novels having been released as of 2017. Hong Lou Meng and Hong Lou Meng: Lin Daiyu yu Bei Jingwang (红楼梦:林黛玉与北静王) were both released by Beijing Entertainment All Technology (北京娱乐通). The latter one was released on 8 January 2010, and it is an extended version of the first game, with the main heroines of the game fully voiced and additional CG+endings.

An English-language opera based on the novel in two acts was composed by Chinese American composer Bright Sheng, with libretto by Sheng and David Henry Hwang. The three-hour opera had its world premiere on 10 September 2016, by the San Francisco Opera. For their 2020 album, Transience of Life, the American art-rock band Elysian Fields set several poems from the novel to music.

In the 2023 video game Limbus Company created by South Korean studio Project Moon, character Hong Lu is based on Dream of the Red Chamber. He is one of the 12 playable sinners in the game, and wields a guandao.

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ "About the Novel: Introduction". Cliffsnotes.com. Retrieved 2 November 2017.
  2. ^ Jonathan Spence, The Search for Modern China (New York: Norton, 1990), 106–110.
  3. ^ a b David Hawkes, "Introduction", The Story of the Stone Volume I (Penguin Books, 1973), pp. 15–19.
  4. ^ "Vale: David Hawkes, Liu Ts'un-yan, Alaistair Morrison". China Heritage Quarterly of the Australian National University.
  5. ^ a b c Shang (2010), pp. 282–83.
  6. ^ Shang (2010), p. 283.
  7. ^ Minford & Hegel (1986), p. 452.
  8. ^ [Cao Xueqin himself destroyed the 110 chapter Dream of the Red Chambers' last 30 chapters]. ifeng.com of Phoenix Television. 4 February 2008. Archived from the original on 30 March 2012.
  9. ^ Maram Epstein, "Reflections of Desire: The Poetics of Gender in Dream of the Red Chamber," Nan Nu 1.1 (1999): 64.
  10. ^ a b Edwards (1994), p. 11, 64.
  11. ^ Yu, Anthony C. (2001). Rereading the Stone: Desire and the Making of Fiction in Dream of the Red Chamber. Princeton University Press. p. 9. ISBN 0-691-09013-0.
  12. ^ Ying, Bicheng (1983). 论《石头记》庚辰本. 上海古籍出版社.
  13. ^ a b Irene Eber, "Riddles in the Dream of the Red Chamber," in Galit Hasan-Rokem, and David Dean Shulman, eds. Untying the Knot : On Riddles and Other Enigmatic Modes (New York: Oxford University Press, 1996), p. 237.
  14. ^ Hu, Xianfeng; Wang, Yang; Wu, Qiang (2014). "Multiple Authors Detection: A Quantitative Analysis of Dream of the Red Chamber". Advances in Adaptive Data Analysis. 06 (4): 1450012. arXiv:1412.6211. doi:10.1142/S1793536914500125. S2CID 14591011.
  15. ^ Li, Zhenyu (13 April 2020). "Dream of the Red Chamber: A book for eternity". People's Daily.
  16. ^ EganBai (2021), p. xxiv.
  17. ^ Yang, Weizhen; Guo, Rongguang (1986). "Introduction". 《红楼梦》辞典. 山东文艺出版社. ISBN 7-5329-0078-9. There are entries for 447 named characters.
  18. ^ Helen Tierney (1999). Women's studies encyclopedia, Volume 1. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 247. ISBN 0-313-31071-8.
  19. ^ Chen (2005), pp. 1–2.
  20. ^ Wilkinson (2018), p. 53.
  21. ^ Cao, Xueqin; Gao E (2006). "Chapter 23". Hong Lou Meng. 新世界出版社. ISBN 9787801879028.
  22. ^ 张, 利玲 (2009). "林黛玉形象补论" [A Complementary Discussion on Lin Daiyu's Image]. 红楼梦学刊. 1 (1): 11–33 – via CQVIP.
  23. ^ The Story of the Stone, Vol I The Golden Days, translated by David Hawkes, pp. 206–209, 300, 320–23. See also Jonathan Spence, "Ch'ing," in K.C. Chang, ed., Food in Chinese Culture (Yale University Press, 1977), p. 279.
  24. ^ EganBai (2021), p. 16.
  25. ^ Quoted by Qiancheng Li in Fictions of Enlightenment (University of Hawaii Press, 2003), p. 19
  26. ^ Cao, Xueqin (1986). The Story of the Stone, Volume 5: The Dreamer Wakes. Translated by Minford, John. Penguin Classics. p. 283.
  27. ^ Levy (1999), p. 15.
  28. ^ a b c d Wood, Michael (2020). The Story of China: The Epic History of a World Power from the Middle Kingdom to Mao and the China Dream (First U.S. ed.). New York: St. Martin's Press. pp. 250, 363–364, 367. ISBN 978-1-250-20257-4.
  29. ^ Chen (2005), pp. 31–37
  30. ^ Li, Wai-yee (2002). "On Becoming a Fish: Paradoxes of Immortality and Enlightenment in Chinese Literature". In Shulman, David; Stroumsa, Guy G. (eds.). Self and Self-transformation in the History of Religions. Oxford University Press. p. 50. ISBN 9780195148169. In chapter 1, after a second perusal of the book, Voiding-the-Void Daoist (supposedly its first reader) concludes that "its main theme is about love." "Love" is perhaps an inadequate rendering of qing, whose range of associations includes desire, affection, feelings, emotions, sentiments, sentience. It is also linked to subjective consciousness, imagination, aesthetic sensibility. Cao Xueqin idealizes qing and raises its transcendent dimension to an almost metaphysical level; in doing so he also emphasizes lyrical self-containment, the power of the mind to dream and imagine a world, and the conception of the romantic-aesthetic as an alternate sphere of existence. [...] To know love is to apprehend its implacable negation.
  31. ^ Shulman, David; Stroumsa, Guy G., eds. (1999). Dream Cultures: Explorations in the Comparative History of Dreaming. Oxford University Press. p. 39. ISBN 9780195123364. The eighteenth-century masterpiece, The Story of the Stone (Shitouji, also known as The Dream of the Red Chamber [Hongloumeng]), is probably the most remarkable example of this dialectic of dream and reality, art and life, passion and enlightenment, nostalgia and knowledge.
  32. ^ Liu, Zaifu and Yunzhong Shu (2008). Reflections on Dream of the red chamber. Cambria Press. p. 115. ISBN 978-1-60497-524-6.
  33. ^ Chen (2005), pp. 12–15
  34. ^ . Chinese Dictionary. Archived from the original on 19 July 2011. Retrieved 16 July 2011.
  35. ^ Zhou, Ruchang (2003). Hong lou duo mu hong 红楼夺目红. 作家出版社. p. 4. ISBN 7-5063-2708-2.
  36. ^ Leo Ou-fan Lee, "Literary Trends I: The Quest for Modernity, 1895–1927," in John K. Fairbank, ed., Cambridge History of China Vol. 12 Republican China 1912–1949 Pt I (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983): 455.
  37. ^ Yu (1997), pp. 119–121.
  38. ^ Wang Guowei, as quoted in Lin Yutang's appreciation of "The Red Chamber Dream", Renditions (Spring 1974), p. 23
  39. ^ Saussy, Haun (2003). "The Age of Attribution: Or, How the Honglou Meng Finally Acquired an Author". Chinese Literature: Essays, Articles, Reviews. 25: 119–132. doi:10.2307/3594284. JSTOR 3594284.
  40. ^ Li Zhisui, The Private Life of Chairman Mao (New York: Random House, 1994), p. 82.
  41. ^ a b Editor's Preface, Ruchang Zhou, Between Noble and Humble: Cao Xueqin and the Dream of the Red Chamber (New York: Peter Lang, 2009), xiv.
  42. ^ Joey Bonner, "Yü P'ing-Po and the Literary Dimension of the Controversy over Hung Lou Meng," The China Quarterly 67 (1976): 546–581 doi:10.1017/S0305741000035517; Merle Goldman, Literary Dissent in Communist China (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1967).
  43. ^ Conspiracy of the Red Mansions. Danwei (6 December 2006).
  44. ^ Ying, Li-hua (2010). "An Qi". Historical Dictionary of Modern Chinese Literature. The Scarecrow Press. p. 5.
  45. ^ a b West, Anthony (22 November 1958). "Through a Glass, Darkly". The New Yorker.
  46. ^ Li Liyan. "The Stylistic Study of the Translation of A Dream of Red Mansions" (in Chinese). 伟大不朽的古典现实主义作品《红楼梦》是我国古典小说艺术成就的最高峰。
  47. ^ Wong (2014), p. 12, 487.
  48. ^ Gray, Ronald "The Stone's Curious Voyage to the West: A Brisk Overview of Honglou Meng's English Translation History and English Hongxue." Journal of Sino-Western Communication 3.2 (December, 2011).
  49. ^ Robert Thom, The Chinese Speaker; or, Extracts from Works Written in the Mandarin Language, as Spoken at Peking (Ningpo: Presbyterian mission Press, 1846).
  50. ^ E. C. Bowra The China Magazine (Hong Kong: Noronha & Sons, 1868–1870) University of Virginia Chinese Text Initiative (This etext contains only the Preface and Chapter 1) . Archived from the original on 14 October 2011. Retrieved 12 October 2011.
  51. ^ The Dream of the Red Chamber or (Hung Lou Meng) (Hong Kong: Kelly & Walsh) 1891, 1892. Hung Lou Meng, from the Project Gutenberg, Hong Kong: Kelly & Walsh, 1892–1893, paper published edition is also available. Wildside Press, ISBN 0-8095-9268-1; and Hard Press, 3 November 2006, ISBN 1-4069-4079-8. at University of Adelaide; rpr. with a new foreword by John Minford (1982-1986), Tokyo; North Clarendon, Vt.: 2010 ISBN 0-8048-4096-2.
  52. ^ Minford, John (1999). "Rereading the Stone". China Review International. 6 (2): 308–309. doi:10.1353/cri.1999.0035. JSTOR 23732171. S2CID 144438620.
  53. ^ Herbert Allen Giles, The Hung Lou Meng 红楼梦 : Commonly Called the Dream of the Red Chamber Monograph ([S.l.]: Read 16th of April, 1885); A History of Chinese Literature pp. 355-384
  54. ^ The China Journal of Science and Art VII.1 (January 1928): 7- 15
  55. ^ Dream of the Red Chamber (Wang Chi-Chen), (New York: Doubleday; London: Routledge, 1929) enlarged version (New York: Twayne: 1958 ISBN 0-385-09379-9).
  56. ^ a b Clemons, Harry (1930). "Book Reviews: The Dream of the Red Chamber". The Virginia Quarterly Review. 6 (2).
  57. ^ Der Traum Der Roten Kammer (Leipzig: Insel-verlag, 1932).
  58. ^ (New York: Pantheon: 1958, ISBN 0-8371-8113-5). Available at Open Library (link).
  59. ^ Rexroth, Kenneth. . University of Pennsylvania School of Arts and Sciences, original from Kenneth Rexroth 1958. Archived from the original on 31 July 2010.
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  72. ^ Reynolds, Barry Lee; Chao-Chih, Liao (August 2014). "Translating Religion in The Dream of the Red Chamber". 3L the Southeast Asian Journal of English Language Studies. 20 (2): 101–116. doi:10.17576/3L-2014-2002-09.
  73. ^ Xuxiang, Suo (June 2015). "A Comparative Analysis of Two English Versions of Some Poems in A Dream of Red Mansions" (PDF). Theory and Practice in Language Studies. 5 (6): 1179–1180. doi:10.17507/tpls.0506.08.
  74. ^ 《明清小说研究概论》 by 党月异、张廷兴 (中央编译出版社, 2015), ISBN 978-7511708779, lists 15 alone printed during the Qing dynasty and 17 during the Republican era (1912–1949).
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Works cited and further reading edit

  • Chen Weizhao (陈维昭), Hongxue Tongshi (红学通史, "A History of Redology"). Shanghai: Shanghai People's Publishing House, 2005. ISBN 7208057885.
  • Egan, Susan Chan; Bai, Xianyong, eds. (2021). A Companion to the Story of the Stone: A Chapter-by-Chapter Guide. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780231199445.
  • Edwards, Louise P. (1994). Men and Women in Qing China : Gender in the Red Chamber Dream. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 9004101233.
  • Eifring, Halvor (2016). Dream of the Red Chamber. Oxford Online Bibliographies (Chinese Studies). Oxford University Press. Retrieved 7 April 2017. Annotated bibliography of Western and Chinese language books and articles (subscription required).
  • C.T. Hsia, Ch VII, "The Dream of the Red Chamber," in The Classic Chinese Novel: A Critical Introduction (1968; rpr. Ithaca, NY: East Asia Program, Cornell University, Cornell East Asia Series, 1996. ISBN 1885445741), pp. 245–297.
  • Levy, Dore J. (1999). Ideal and Actual in the Story of the Stone. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0231114060.
  • Zaifu Liu, Yunzhong Shu, Reflections on Dream of the Red Chamber (Amherst, N.Y.: Cambria Press, 2008).
  • Minford, John; Hegel, Robert E. (1986). "Hung-lou meng 紅樓夢". In Nienhauser, William H. (ed.). The Indiana Companion to Traditional Chinese Literature. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. pp. 452–56. ISBN 0-253-32983-3.
  • Andrew H. Plaks, Archetype and Allegory in the "Dream of the Red Chamber" (Princeton, NJ Princeton University Press, 1976). Reprinted: (Ann Arbor: U.M.I. Books on Demand, Reprint, 1993).
  • Schonebaum, Andrew; Lu, Tina (2012). Approaches to Teaching the Story of the Stone (Dream of the Red Chamber). New York: Modern Language Association of America. ISBN 9781603291101. Articles on the nature, content, and history of the novel.
  • Shang, Wei (2010). "The Literati Era and Its Demise (1723–1840)". In Chang, Kang-i Sun (ed.). The Cambridge History of Chinese Literature, Volume II: From 1375. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 245–342. ISBN 978-0-521-85559-4.
  • Wang, Dylan K. (2023). "Translating Heteroglossia: Comparing Two English Translations of Honglou Meng". Archiv orientální. 91 (2): 307–326. doi:10.47979/aror.j.91.2.307-326. S2CID 264901884.
  • Wilkinson, Endymion (2018). Chinese History: A New Manual. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Asia Center. ISBN 9780998888309..
  • Wong, Laurence Kwok Pun (2014). Dreaming Across Languages and Cultures: A Study of the Literary Translations of the Hong Lou Meng. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4438-6828-0.
  • Shih-Ch'ang Wu, On the Red Chamber Dream: A Critical Study of Two Annotated Manuscripts of the 18th Century (Oxford: The Clarendon Press, 1961).
  • Chi Xiao, The Chinese Garden as Lyric Enclave: A Generic Study of the Story of the Stone (Ann Arbor, MI: Center for Chinese Studies Publications 2001).
  • Yu, Anthony (1994), "Cao Xueqin'a Hongloumeng", in Stoler-Miller, Barbara (ed.), Masterworks of Asian literature in comparative perspective: a guide for teaching, Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe, pp. 285–299, ISBN 1563242575
  • ——— (1997). Rereading the Stone: Desire and the Making of Fiction in Dream of the Red Chamber. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691015619.
  • Yů, Ying-shih (1974). "The Two Worlds of 'Hung-Lou Meng'". Renditions. 2 (Spring). Shatin, New Territories: Chinese University of Kong Kong Press: 5–21.; reprinted in Ying-shih Yü, with the editorial assistance of Josephine Chiu Duke and Michael S. Duke, Chinese History and Culture Volume 2 Seventeenth Century Through Twentieth Century (New York: Columbia University Press, 2016), pp. 134–151.
  • Zhang, Xinzhi (1990), "How to Read the Hong Lou Meng", in Rolston, David (ed.), How to Read the Chinese Novel, translated by Andrew Plaks, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press Translation of a Qing dynasty commentary showing a traditional interpretation.
  • Ruchang Zhou, Edited by Ronald R. Gray, Mark S. Ferrara, Between Noble and Humble: Cao Xueqin and the Dream of the Red Chamber (New York: Peter Lang, 2009). Translated by Liangmei Bao and Kyongsook Park. ISBN 978-1-4331-0407-7.

External links edit

  • Bryan Van Norden, Guide to Reading Story of the Stone/Dream of the Red Chamber.
  • Zhang Xiugui, CliffsNotes. Summary and notes.
  • Richard Smith (Rice University) Dream of the Red Chamber Outline of Vol I of Story of the Stone, with comments.
  • Article on China Central Television Program about Red ChamberChina Daily. Raymond Zhou. 12 November 2005.
  • Dream of the Red Chamber 紅樓夢 Chinese text with embedded Chinese-English dictionary
  •   The Dream of the Red Chamber public domain audiobook at LibriVox
  • Dream of the Red Chamber: Afterlives, University of Minnesota. Eight sections of an on-line course, including "The Text of the Novel; "Nineteenth Century Responses"; "Twentieth and Twenty-first Century Responses"; "The Social World of the Dream";
  • Marshall, Heather. "From West to East: Conservation of the Chinese novel 'Dream of the Red Chamber'". British Library. Describes the book conservation work.

dream, chamber, story, stone, redirects, here, 1988, novel, story, stone, hughart, novel, other, uses, disambiguation, story, stone, 18th, century, chinese, novel, authored, xueqin, considered, four, great, classical, novels, chinese, literature, known, psycho. The Story of the Stone redirects here For the 1988 novel see The Story of the Stone Hughart novel For other uses see Dream of the Red Chamber disambiguation Dream of the Red Chamber or The Story of the Stone is an 18th century Chinese novel authored by Cao Xueqin considered to be one of the Four Great Classical Novels of Chinese literature It is known for its psychological scope and its observation of the worldview aesthetics lifestyles and social relations of High Qing China 1 Dream of the Red ChamberA scene from the novel painted by Xu Baozhuan 1810 1873 AuthorCao XueqinOriginal title紅樓夢CountryChinaLanguageChineseGenreFamily sagaPublication dateMid 18th century manuscripts 1791 first printed edition Published in English1868 1892 1973 1980 first complete English translation Dewey Decimal895 1348Dream of the Red Chamber Dream of the Red Chamber in traditional top and simplified bottom Chinese charactersTraditional Chinese紅樓夢Simplified Chinese红楼梦TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinHong lou mengWade GilesHung2 lou2 meng4IPA xʊ ŋ lo ʊ me ŋ WuRomanizationGhon leu monYue CantoneseYale RomanizationHuhng lauh muhngJyutpingHung4 lau4 mung6IPA hoŋ lɐu moŋ Southern MinTai loAng lau bangAlternative Chinese nameTraditional Chinese石頭記Simplified Chinese石头记Literal meaning Records of the Stone TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinShitou liWade GilesShih2 tʻou2 chi4IPA ʂɻ tʰo ʊ tɕi WuRomanizationZah deu ciYue CantoneseYale RomanizationSehk tauh geiJyutpingSek6 tau4 gei3IPA sɛːk tʰɐu kei Southern MinTai loTsio h thau kiThe intricate strands of its plot depict the rise and decline of a family much like Cao s own and by extension of the dynasty itself Cao depicts the power of the father over the family but the novel is intended to be a memorial to the women he knew in his youth friends relatives and servants At a more profound level the author explores religious and philosophical questions and the writing style includes echoes of the plays and novels of the late Ming as well as poetry from earlier periods 2 Cao apparently began composing it in the 1740s and worked on it until his death in 1763 or 1764 Copies of his uncompleted manuscript circulated in Cao s social circle under the title Story of a Stone in slightly varying versions of eighty chapters It was not published until nearly three decades after Cao s death when Gao E and Cheng Weiyuan 程偉元 edited the first and second printed editions under the title Dream of the Red Chamber from 1791 to 1792 adding 40 chapters It is still debated whether Gao and Cheng composed these chapters themselves and the extent to which they did or did not represent Cao s intentions Their 120 chapter edition became the most widely circulated version 3 The title has also been translated as Red Chamber Dream and A Dream of Red Mansions Redology is the field of study devoted to the novel Contents 1 Language 2 History 2 1 Textual history 2 1 1 Rouge versions 2 1 2 Cheng Gao versions 3 Plot summary 4 Characters 4 1 Jia Baoyu and the Twelve Beauties of Jinling 4 2 Other main characters 4 3 Notable minor characters 5 Themes 6 Reception and influence in modern era 7 Translations and reception in the West 8 Sequels and continuations 9 Adaptations 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Citations 11 2 Works cited and further reading 12 External linksLanguage editThe novel is composed in written vernacular baihua rather than Classical Chinese wenyan Cao Xueqin was well versed in Chinese poetry and in Classical Chinese having written tracts in the semi wenyan style while the novel s dialogue is written in the Beijing Mandarin dialect which was to become the basis of modern spoken Chinese In the early 20th century lexicographers used the text to establish the vocabulary of the new standardised language and reformers used the novel to promote the written vernacular 4 History editTextual history edit Dream of the Red Chamber has a complicated textual history that scholars and historians have long debated 5 It is known with certainty that Cao Xueqin began writing Dream of the Red Chamber in the 1740s 5 Cao was a member of a prominent Chinese family that had served the Manchu emperors of the Qing dynasty but whose fortunes had begun to decline By the time of Cao s death in 1763 or 1764 hand copied manuscripts of the novel s first 80 chapters had begun circulating and Cao may have made early drafts of the remaining chapters 5 These hand copied manuscripts circulated first among his personal friends and a growing circle of aficionados then eventually on the open market where they sold for large sums of money 6 7 The first printed version of Dream of the Red Chamber published by Cheng Weiyuan and Gao E in 1791 contains edits and revisions that Cao never authorized 3 It is possible that Cao destroyed the last chapters 8 or that at least parts of Cao s original ending were incorporated into the 120 chapter Cheng Gao versions 9 with Gao E s careful emendations of Cao s draft 10 Rouge versions edit nbsp A page from the Jimao manuscript one of the Rouge versions of the novel 1759 11 Up until 1791 the novel circulated in hand copied manuscripts Even amongst some 12 independent surviving manuscripts small differences in some characters rearrangements and possible rewritings cause the texts to vary a little The earliest manuscripts end abruptly at the latest at the 80th chapter The earlier versions contain comments and annotations in red or black ink from unknown commentators These commentators remarks reveal much about the author as a person and it is now believed that some of them may even be members of Cao Xueqin s own family The most prominent commentator is Zhiyanzhai who revealed much of the interior structuring of the work and the original manuscript ending now lost These manuscripts the most textually reliable versions are known as rouge versions zhi ben 脂本 The early 80 chapters brim with prophecies and dramatic foreshadowings that give hints as to how the book would continue For example it is obvious that Lin Daiyu will eventually die in the course of the novel that Baoyu and Baochai will marry that Baoyu will become a monk A branch of Redology known as tanyi xue 探佚學 is focused on recovering the lost manuscript ending based on the commentators annotations in the Rouge versions as well as the internal foreshadowings in the earlier 80 chapters Several early manuscripts are still extant At the present the Jiaxu manuscript dating to 1754 is held in the Shanghai Museum the Jimao manuscript 1759 is held in the National Library of China and the Gengchen manuscript 1760 is held in the library of Peking University Beijing Normal University and the Institute of Oriental Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences both also held manuscripts of the novel that predate the first printed edition of 1791 nbsp The Jiaxu manuscript 1754 nbsp The Gengchen manuscript 1760Cheng Gao versions edit Main article Cheng Gao versions In 1791 Gao E and Cheng Weiyuan brought out the novel s first printed edition This was also the first complete edition of The Story of the Stone which they printed as the Illustrated Dream of the Red Chamber Xiuxiang Hong Lou Meng 繡像紅樓夢 While the original Rouge manuscripts have eighty chapters the 1791 edition completed the novel in 120 chapters The first 80 chapters were edited from the Rouge versions but the last 40 were newly published 12 In 1792 Cheng and Gao published a second edition correcting editorial errors of the 1791 version In the 1791 prefaces Cheng claimed to have put together an ending based on the author s working manuscripts 10 The debate over the last 40 chapters and the 1791 92 prefaces continues to this day Many modern scholars believe these chapters were a later addition Hu Shih in his Studies on A Dream of the Red Chamber 1921 argued that these chapters were written by Gao E citing the foreshadowing of the main characters fates in Chapter 5 which differs from the ending of the 1791 Cheng Gao version However during the mid 20th century the discovery of a 120 chapter manuscript that dates well before 1791 further complicated the questions regarding Gao E and Cheng Weiyuan s involvement whether they simply edited or actually wrote the continuation of the novel 13 Though it is unclear if the last 40 chapters of the discovered manuscript contained the original works of Cao Irene Eber found the discovery seems to confirm Cheng and Gao s claim that they merely edited a complete manuscript consisting of 120 chapters rather than actually writing a portion of the novel 13 The book is usually published and read in Cheng Weiyuan and Gao E s 120 chapter version Some modern editions such as Zhou Ruchang s do not include the last 40 chapters In 2014 three researchers using data analysis of writing styles announced that Applying our method to the Cheng Gao version of Dream of the Red Chamber has led to convincing if not irrefutable evidence that the first 80 chapters and the last 40 chapters of the book were written by two different authors 14 In 2020 Zhang Qingshan the president of the academic organization Society of the Dream of the Red Chamber stated that although the authorship of the novel s last 40 chapters remains uncertain it is unlikely Gao E was the one who wrote them 15 Plot summary edit nbsp A piece from a series of brush paintings by the Qing dynasty artist Sun Wen 1818 1904 depicting a scene from the novel In the novel s frame story a sentient Stone left over when the goddess Nuwa mended the heaven aeons ago wants to enjoy the pleasures of the red dust the mundane world The Stone begs a Taoist priest and a Buddhist monk to take it with them to see the world The Stone along with a companion in Cheng Gao versions they are merged into the same character is then given a chance to learn from human existence and enters the mortal realm reborn as Jia Baoyu Precious Jade thus The Story of the Stone The novel provides a detailed episodic record of life in the two branches of the wealthy aristocratic Jia 賈 clan the Rongguo House 榮國府 and the Ningguo House 寧國府 who reside in large adjacent family compounds in the capital The capital however is not named and the first chapter insists that the dynasty is indeterminate 16 The ancestors of the two families were made Chinese nobility and given imperial titles and as the novel begins the houses are two of the most illustrious families in the city One of the Jia daughters is made a Royal Consort and to suitably receive her the family constructs the Daguanyuan a lush landscaped garden the setting for much of subsequent action The novel describes the Jias wealth and influence in great naturalistic detail and charts the Jias fall from the height of their prestige following some thirty main characters and over four hundred minor ones As the carefree adolescent male heir of the family Baoyu in this life has a special bond with his sickly cousin Lin Daiyu who shares his love of music and poetry Baoyu however is predestined to marry another cousin Xue Baochai whose grace and intelligence exemplify an ideal woman but with whom he lacks an emotional connection The romantic rivalry and friendship among the three characters against the backdrop of the family s declining fortunes form the central story A series of paintings by Fei Danxu 1801 1850 depicting scenes from the novel nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Characters edit nbsp 1889 woodcut print depicting Xue Baochai chasing butterflies chapter 27 Dream of the Red Chamber contains an extraordinarily large number of characters nearly 40 are considered major characters and there are over 400 additional ones 17 The novel is also known for the complex portraits of its many women characters 18 According to Lu Xun in the appendix to A Brief History of Chinese Fiction Dream of the Red Chamber broke every conceivable thought and technique in traditional Chinese fiction its realistic characterization presents thoroughly human characters who are neither wholly good nor wholly bad but who seem to inhabit part of the real world 19 The names of the characters present a challenge to the translator since many of them convey meaning David Hawkes left the names of the masters mistresses and their family members in pinyin Jia Zheng and Lady Wang for instance translated the meanings of the servants s names such as Aroma and Skybright and put the names of the Daoists and Buddhists into Latin Sapientia and those of actors and actresses into French 20 Jia Baoyu and the Twelve Beauties of Jinling edit Jia Baoyu traditional Chinese 賈寶玉 simplified Chinese 贾宝玉 pinyin Jiǎ Bǎoyu Wade Giles Chia Pao yu lit Precious Jade The main protagonist is about 12 or 13 years old when introduced in the novel 21 The adolescent son of Jia Zheng and his wife Lady Wang and born with a piece of luminescent jade in his mouth the Stone Baoyu is the heir apparent to the Rongguo House Frowned on by his strict Confucian father Baoyu reads Zhuangzi and Romance of the Western Chamber on the sly rather than the Four Books of classic Chinese education Baoyu is highly intelligent but dislikes the fawning bureaucrats who frequent his father s house A sensitive and compassionate individual he has a special relationship with many of the women in the house Lin Daiyu 林黛玉 Lin Daiyu Lin Tai yu Blue black Jade Jia Baoyu s younger first cousin and his true love She is the daughter of Lin Ruhai 林如海 an official in the lucrative Yangzhou salt commission and Lady Jia Min 賈敏 Baoyu s paternal aunt She is an icon of spirituality and intelligence beautiful sentimental sarcastic self assured an accomplished poet but subject to fits of jealousy She suffers from a respiratory ailment In the frame story Baoyu in his previous incarnation as the Deity Shenying watered the Fairy Crimson Pearl Daiyu s incarnation The purpose of her mortal reincarnation is to repay Baoyu with tears The novel proper starts in Chapter 3 with Daiyu s arrival at the Rongguo House shortly after the death of her mother 22 Xue Baochai 薛寶釵 薛宝钗 Xue Bǎochai Hsueh Pao chai Jeweled Hair Pin Jia Baoyu s other first cousin The only daughter of Aunt Xue 薛姨媽 sister to Baoyu s mother Baochai is a foil to Daiyu Where Daiyu is unconventional and sincere Baochai is worldly wise and very tactful a model Chinese feudal maiden The novel describes her as beautiful and ambitious Baochai has a round face fair skin large eyes and some would say a more voluptuous figure in contrast to Daiyu s slender willowy daintiness Baochai carries a golden locket with her which contains words given to her in childhood by a Buddhist monk Baochai s golden locket and Baoyu s jade contain inscriptions that appear to complement one another perfectly in the material world Her marriage to Baoyu is seen in the book as predestined but ultimately fails due to Baoyu s love for Daiyu persisting after her death Jia Yuanchun 賈元春 贾元春 Jiǎ Yuanchun Chia Yuan chun First Spring Baoyu s elder sister by about a decade Originally one of the ladies in waiting in the imperial palace Yuanchun later becomes an Imperial Consort having impressed the Emperor with her virtue and learning Her illustrious position as a favorite of the Emperor marks the height of the Jia family s powers Despite her prestigious position Yuanchun feels imprisoned within the imperial palace and dies at the age of forty The name of four sisters together Yuan Ying Tan Xi is a homophone with Supposed to sigh Jia Tanchun 賈探春 贾探春 Jiǎ Tanchun Chia Tan chun Seeking Spring Baoyu s younger half sister by Concubine Zhao Extremely outspoken she is almost as capable as Wang Xifeng Wang Xifeng herself compliments her privately but laments that she was born in the wrong womb since concubine children are not respected as much as those by first wives She is also a very talented poet Tanchun is nicknamed Rose for her beauty and her prickly personality She later marries into a military family on the South Sea far away from home Shi Xiangyun 史湘雲 史湘云 Shǐ Xiangyun Shih Hsiang yun Xiang River Clouds Jia Baoyu s younger second cousin Grandmother Jia s grandniece Orphaned in infancy she grows up under her wealthy paternal uncle and aunt who treats her unkindly In spite of this Xiangyun is openhearted and cheerful A comparatively androgynous beauty Xiangyun looks good in men s clothes once she put on Baoyu s clothes and Grandmother Jia thought she was a man and loves to drink She is forthright and without tact but her forgiving nature takes the sting from her casually truthful remarks She is well educated and as talented a poet as Daiyu or Baochai Her young husband dies shortly after their marriage She vows to be a faithful widow for the rest of her life Miaoyu 妙玉 Miaoyu Miao yu Wonderful Clever Jade Hawkes Minford translation Adamantina A young nun from Buddhist cloisters of the Rong guo house Although beautiful and learned she is aloof haughty unsociable and has an obsession with cleanliness The novel says she was compelled by her illness to become a nun and shelters herself under the nunnery to dodge political affairs Her fate is not known after her abduction by bandits Jia Yingchun 賈迎春 贾迎春 Jiǎ Yingchun Chia Ying chun Welcoming Spring Second female family member of the generation of the Jia household after Yuanchun Yingchun is the daughter of Jia She Baoyu s uncle and therefore his elder first cousin A kind hearted weak willed person Yingchun is said to have a wooden personality and seems rather apathetic toward all worldly affairs Although very pretty and well read she does not compare in intelligence and wit to any of her cousins Yingchun s most famous trait it seems is her unwillingness to meddle in the affairs of her family Eventually Yingchun marries an official of the imperial court her marriage being merely one of her father s desperate attempts to raise the declining fortunes of the Jia family The newly married Yingchun becomes a victim of domestic abuse and constant violence at the hands of her cruel abusive husband Jia Xichun 賈惜春 贾惜春 Jiǎ Xichun Chia Hsi chun Treasuring Spring Baoyu s younger cousin from the Ningguo House but brought up in the Rongguo House A gifted painter she is also a devout Buddhist She is the young sister of Jia Zhen head of the Ningguo House At the end of the novel after the fall of the house of Jia she gives up her worldly concerns and becomes a Buddhist nun She is the second youngest of Jinling s Twelve Beauties described as a pre teen in most parts of the novel Wang Xifeng 王熙鳳 王熙凤 Wang Xifeng Wang Hsi feng Splendid Phoenix alias Sister Feng Baoyu s elder cousin in law young wife to Jia Lian who is Baoyu s paternal first cousin niece to Lady Wang Xifeng is hence related to Baoyu both by blood and marriage A handsome woman Xifeng is capable clever humorous and at times vicious and cruel Undeniably the most worldly woman in the novel Xifeng is in charge of the daily running of the Rongguo household and wields economic as well as political power within the family Xifeng keeps both Lady Wang and Grandmother Jia entertained with her jokes and chatter By playing the role of the perfect filial daughter in law she rules the household with an iron fist Xifeng can be kind hearted toward the poor and helpless or cruel enough to kill She makes a fortune by investing in loan sharking rather than maintaining the family estate and brings about the downfall of the family She dies soon after the family assets are seized by the government Jia Qiaojie 賈巧姐 贾巧姐 Jiǎ Qiǎojie Chia Chiao chieh Wang Xifeng s and Jia Lian s daughter She is a child through much of the novel After the fall of the house of Jia in the version of Gao E and Cheng Weiyuan she marries the son of a wealthy rural family introduced by Granny Liu and goes on to lead a happy uneventful life in the countryside Li Wan 李紈 李纨 Lǐ Wan Li Wan White Silk Baoyu s elder sister in law widow of Baoyu s deceased elder brother Jia Zhu 賈珠 Her primary task is to bring up her son Lan and watch over her female cousins The novel portrays Li Wan a young widow in her late twenties as a mild mannered woman with no wants or desires the perfect Confucian ideal of a proper mourning widow She eventually attains high social status due to the success of her son at the Imperial Exams but the novel sees her as a tragic figure because she wasted her youth upholding the strict standards of behavior Qin Keqing 秦可卿 Qin Keqing Ch in K o ching a homophone with look down upon love Daughter in law to Jia Zhen Of all the characters in the novel the circumstances of her life and early death are amongst the most mysterious Apparently a very beautiful and flirtatious woman she carried on an affair with her father in law and dies before the second quarter of the novel Her bedroom is bedecked with priceless artifacts belonging to extremely sensual women both historical and mythological In her bed Bao Yu first travels to the Land of Illusion where he has a sexual encounter with Two In One who represents Xue Baochai and Lin Daiyu Two in One s name is also Keqing making Qin Keqing also a significant character in Bao Yu s sexual experience The original twelve songs hint that Qin Keqing hanged herself The Twelve Beauties of Jinling Portraits of the main female characters of the novel Dream of the Red Chamber as they are known as the Twelve Beauties of Jinling by an anonymous artist of the Qing dynasty collection of the Posner Center of Carnegie Mellon University nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Other main characters edit Grandmother Jia 賈母 贾母 Jiǎmǔ nee Shi Also called the Matriarch or the Dowager the daughter of Marquis Shi of Jinling Grandmother to both Baoyu and Daiyu she is the highest living authority in the Rongguo house and the oldest and most respected of the entire clan yet also a doting person She has two sons Jia She and Jia Zheng and a daughter Min Daiyu s mother Daiyu is brought to the house of the Jias at the insistence of Grandmother Jia and she helps Daiyu and Baoyu bond as childhood playmates and later kindred spirits She distributes her savings among her relatives after the seizure of their properties by the government shortly before her death Jia She 賈赦 贾赦 Jiǎ She Chia Sheh The elder son of the Dowager He is the father of Jia Lian and Jia Yingchun He is a treacherous and greedy man and a womanizer He is jealous of his younger brother whom his mother favors He is later stripped of his title and banished by the government Jia Zheng 賈政 贾政 Jiǎ Zheng Chia Cheng Baoyu s father the younger son of the Dowager He is a disciplinarian and Confucian scholar Afraid his one surviving heir will turn bad he imposes strict rules on his son and uses occasional corporal punishment He has a wife Lady Wang and one concubine Zhao He is a Confucian scholar who tries to live life as an upright and decent person but out of touch with reality and a hands off person at home and in court Jia Lian 賈璉 贾琏 Jiǎ Liǎn Chia Lien Xifeng s husband and Baoyu s paternal elder cousin a notorious womanizer whose numerous affairs cause much trouble with his jealous wife including affairs with men that are not known by his wife His pregnant concubine Second Sister You eventually dies by his wife s engineering He and his wife are in charge of most hiring and monetary allocation decisions and often fight over this power He is a cad with a flawed character but still has a conscience Xiangling 香菱 Xiang Ling Fragrant Water caltrop Hawkes Minford translation Caltrop the Xues maid born Zhen Yinglian 甄英蓮 a homophone with deserving pity the kidnapped and lost daughter of Zhen Shiyin 甄士隱 a homophone with Hiding the truth the country gentleman in Chapter 1 Her name is changed to Qiuling 秋菱 by Xue Pan s spoiled wife Xia Jingui 夏金桂 who is jealous of her and tries to poison her Xue Pan makes her the lady of the house after Jingui s death She soon dies while giving birth Ping er 平兒 Peace Hawkes Minford translation Patience Xifeng s chief maid and personal confidante also concubine to Xifeng s husband Jia Lian Originally Xifeng s maid in the Wang household she follows Xifeng as part of her dowry when Xifeng marries into the Jia household She handles her troubles with grace assists Xifeng capably and appears to have the respect of most of the household servants She is also one of the very few people who can get close to Xifeng She wields considerable power in the house as Xifeng s most trusted assistant but uses her power sparingly and justly She is supremely loyal to her mistress but more soft hearted and sweet tempered Xue Pan 薛蟠 Xue Pan Hsueh Pan to Coil as a dragon Baochai s older brother a dissolute idle rake who was a local bully in Jinling He was known for his amorous exploits with both men and women Not particularly well educated he once killed a man over a servant girl Xiangling and had the manslaughter case hushed up with money Granny Liu 劉姥姥 刘姥姥 Liu Lǎolao A country rustic and distant relation to the Wang family who provides a comic contrast to the ladies of the Rongguo House during two visits She eventually rescues Qiaojie from her maternal uncle who wanted to sell her Lady Wang 王夫人 Wang Furen A Buddhist primary wife of Jia Zheng Daughter of one of the four most prominent families of Jinling Because of her purported ill health she hands over the running of the household to her niece Xifeng as soon as the latter marries into the Jia household although she retains overall control over Xifeng s affairs so that the latter always has to report to her Although Lady Wang appears to be a kind mistress and a doting mother she can in fact be cruel and ruthless when her authority is challenged She pays a great deal of attention to Baoyu s maids to make sure that Baoyu does not develop romantic relationships with them Aunt Xue 薛姨媽 薛姨妈 Xue Yima nee Wang Baoyu s maternal aunt mother to Pan and Baochai sister to Lady Wang She is kindly and affable for the most part but finds it hard to control her unruly son Hua Xiren 花襲人 花袭人 Hua Xiren Flower Assails Men Hawkes Minford translation Aroma Baoyu s principal maid and his unofficial concubine While she still has standing as the Dowager s maid the Dowager gave her to Baoyu so in practice Xiren is his maid Considerate and forever worried about Baoyu she is the partner of his first adolescent sexual encounter in the real world in Chapter 5 After Baoyu s disappearance she unknowingly marries actor Jiang Yuhan one of Baoyu s friends nbsp Qingwen painted by Xu BaozhuanQingwen 晴雯 Qingwen Sunny Multicolored Clouds Hawkes Minford translation Skybright Baoyu s personal maid Brash haughty and the most beautiful maid in the household Qingwen is said to resemble Daiyu very strongly Of all of Baoyu s maids she is the only one who dares to argue with Baoyu when reprimanded but is also extremely devoted to him She is disdainful of Xiren s attempt to use her sexual relation with Baoyu to raise her status in the family Lady Wang later suspected her of having an affair with Baoyu and publicly dismisses her on that account angry at the unfair treatment and of the indignities and slanders that attended her as a result Qingwen dies of an illness shortly after leaving the Jia household Yuanyang 鴛鴦 鸳鸯 Yuanyang Pair of Mandarin Ducks Hawkes Minford translation Faithful The Dowager s chief maid She rejects a marriage proposal as concubine to the lecherous Jia She Grandmother Jia s eldest son and commits suicide right after the Dowager s death Mingyan 茗煙 茗烟 Mingyan Tea Vapor Hawkes Minford translation Tealeaf Baoyu s page boy Knows his master like the back of his hand Zijuan 紫鵑 紫鹃 Zǐjuan Tzu chuan Purple Rhododendron or Cuckoo Hawkes Minford translation Nightingale Daiyu s faithful maid ceded by the Dowager to her granddaughter She later becomes a nun to serve Jia Xichun Xueyan 雪雁 Xueyan Hawkes Minford translation Snowgoose Daiyu s other maid She came with Daiyu from Yangzhou and comes across as a young sweet girl She is asked to accompany the veiled bride Baochai to trick Baoyu into believing that he is marrying Daiyu Concubine Zhao 趙姨娘 赵姨娘 Zhao Yiniang A concubine of Jia Zheng She is the mother of Jia Tanchun and Jia Huan Baoyu s half siblings She longs to be the mother of the head of the household which she does not achieve She plots to murder Baoyu and Xifeng with black magic and it is believed that her plot cost her own life Notable minor characters edit nbsp A scene from the story painted by Xu BaozhuanQin Zhong 秦鐘 a homophone with great lover His elder sister is Qin Keqing Baoyu s nephew s wife and so he is technically a generation younger than Baoyu Both he and Qin Keqing are the adopted children of Qin Ye 秦業 The two boys enroll in the Jia clan s school together and he becomes Baoyu s best friend The novel leaves open the possibility that things might have gone beyond innocent friendship Qin Zhong and the novice Zhineng 智能 Intelligent Sapientia in the Hawkes translation fall in love but Qin Zhong dies soon after from a combination of his father s severe beating sexual exhaustion grief and remorse 23 One commentator writes that Qin Zhong is a pun for qingzhong passion incarnate and that his sister Qinshi initiates Baoyu into heterosexual relations in his dream and Qin Zhong initiates him into homosexual ones 24 Jia Yucun 贾雨村 The childhood tutor of Lin Daiyu Originally a poor scholar he became a prefect with the help of Zhen Shiyin before being fired for corruption He later connected himself with his distant relatives in the Jia family through the Lin family and was reinstated as prefect Jia Lan 賈蘭 Son of Baoyu s deceased older brother Jia Zhu and his virtuous wife Li Wan Jia Lan is an appealing child throughout the book and at the end succeeds in the imperial examinations to the credit of the family Jia Zhen 賈珍 Head of the Ningguo House the elder branch of the Jia family He has a wife Lady You a younger sister Jia Xichun and many concubines He is extremely greedy and the unofficial head of the clan since his father has retired He has an adulterous affair with his daughter in law Qin Keqing Lady You 尤氏 Wife of Jia Zhen She is the sole mistress of the Ningguo House Jia Rong 賈蓉 Jia Zhen s son He is the husband of Qin Keqing An exact copy of his father he is the Cavalier of the Imperial Guards Xue Baoqin 薛寶琴 The paternal cousin of Xue Baochai Depicted as extremely beautiful and talented Grandmother Jia originally sought to betroth her to Jia Baoyu Second Sister You 尤二姐 Jia Lian takes her in secret as his lover Though a kept woman before she was married after her wedding she becomes a faithful and doting wife Because of Wang Xifeng s intrigue she finally kills herself by swallowing a large piece of gold Liu Xianglian 柳湘蓮 A descendant of the Liu family and an amateur actor A bold man he is good friends with Jia Baoyu and forms a brotherhood with Xue Pan Lady Xing 邢夫人 Jia She s wife She is Jia Lian s stepmother Xing Xiuyan 邢岫烟 The niece of Lady Xing She is intelligent and courteous but is a modest beauty due to her and her family s financial struggles Jia Huan 賈環 Son of Concubine Zhao He and his mother are both reviled by the family and he carries himself like a kicked dog He shows his malignant nature by spilling candle wax intending to blind his half brother Baoyu Sheyue 麝月 Hawkes Minford translation Musk Baoyu s main maid after Xiren and Qingwen She is beautiful and caring a perfect complement to Xiren Qiutong 秋桐 Jia Lian s other concubine Originally a maid of Jia She she is given to Jia Lian as a concubine She is a very proud and arrogant woman Sister Sha 傻大姐 A maid who does rough work for the Dowager She is guileless but amusing and caring In the Gao E and Cheng Weiyuan version she unintentionally informs Daiyu of Baoyu s secret marriage plans Themes editHonglou meng is a book about enlightenment or awakening A man in his life experiences several decades of winter and summer The most sagacious and wise is certainly not submerged in considerations of loss and gain However the experiences of prosperity and decline coming together and dispersing of family members and friends are too common how can his mind be like wood and stone without being moved by all this In the beginning there is a profusion of intimate feelings which is followed by tears and lamentations Finally there is a time when one feels that everything he does is futile At this moment how can he not be enlightened A commentary on the novel by writer Jiang Shunyi dated 1869 25 The opening chapter of the novel describes a great stone archway and on either side a couplet is inscribed 假作真時真亦假 無為有處有還無 Truth becomes fiction when the fiction s true Real becomes not real where the unreal s real This couplet is later reiterated however this time as 假去真來真勝假 無原有是有非無 When Fiction departs and Truth appears Truth prevails Though Not real was once Real the Real is never unreal 26 As one critic points out the couplet signifies not a hard and fast division between truth and falsity reality and illusion but the impossibility of making such distinctions in any world fictional or actual 27 It also symbolizes the peculiar Taoist religious tradition prevalent in Northern China since the Yuan dynasty as practiced in Cao s time as well as Taoism s alternate roles in society such as doctrines for philosophical and intellectual rather than religious guidance and one of the schools of thought Buddhist sects in China syncretized with their own 28 This theme is further reflected in the name of the main family Jia 賈 pronounced jiǎ which is a homophone with the character jiǎ 假 meaning false or fictitious this is mirrored the surname of the other main family Zhen 甄 pronounced zhen a homophone for the word real 真 It is suggested that the novel is both a realistic reflection and a fictional or dream version of Cao s own family Early Chinese critics identified its two major themes as those of the nature of love and of the transitoriness of earthly material values as outlined in Buddhist and Taoist philosophies 29 Later scholars echoed the philosophical aspects of love and its transcendent power as depicted in the novel 30 One remarked that the novel is a remarkable example of the dialectic of dream and reality art and life passion and enlightenment nostalgia and knowledge 31 The novel also vividly depicts Chinese material culture such as medicine cuisine tea culture festivities proverbs mythology Confucianism Buddhism Taoism filial piety opera music architecture funeral rites painting classic literature and the Four Books Among these the novel is particularly notable for its grand use of poetry 32 Since the establishment of Cao Xueqin as the novel s author its autobiographical aspects have come to the fore Cao Xueqin s clan was similarly raided in real life and suffered a steep decline Marxist interpretation starting in the New Culture Movement saw the novel as exposing feudal society s corruption and emphasized the clashes between the classes Since the 1980s critics have embraced the novel s richness and aesthetics in a more multicultural context 33 In the title Hong lou Meng 紅樓夢 literally Red Chamber Dream red chamber can refer to the sheltered chambers where the daughters of a prominent family reside 34 It also refers to Baoyu s dream in chapter five set in a red chamber a dream where the fates of many of the characters are foreshadowed Mansion is one of the definitions of the Chinese character 樓 lou but the scholar Zhou Ruchang writes that in the phrase honglou it is more accurately translated as chamber 35 The novel s mythological elements were also inspired by the services Cao was involved in at the Dongyue Temple 28 The temple s most venerated gods came from Daoism Chinese Buddhism Tibetan Buddhism and shamanic traditions from various regions within and outside of China and the book s spiritual themes prose stylization and portrayals of mythical figures were inspired by the traditional stories told about these deities and other oral temple traditions from Beijing 28 Much of this folklore was already popular during the Yuan dynasty and was retold in various ways in Cao s era in the Qing dynasty 28 Reception and influence in modern era edit nbsp The cover of a 1912 printed edition of the Youzheng versionIn the late 19th century Hong Lou Meng s influence was so pervasive that the reformer Liang Qichao attacked it along with another classic novel Water Margin as incitement to robbery and lust and for smothering the introduction of Western style novels which he regarded as more socially responsible 36 The eminent scholar Wang Guowei however achieved a new method of literary interpretation in an innovative and path breaking 1904 essay which invoked the philosophy of Arthur Schopenhauer Wang called the novel the tragedy of tragedies in contrast to the prosperous endings in most earlier drama and fiction 37 Wang further proclaims the novel as W orthy of being considered as the one great masterpiece in the realm of Chinese art 38 In the early 20th century although the New Culture Movement took a critical view of the Confucian classics the scholar Hu Shih used the tools of textual criticism to put the novel in an entirely different light as a foundation for national culture Hu and his students Gu Jiegang and Yu Pingbo first established that Cao Xueqin was the work s author Taking the question of authorship seriously reflected a new respect for fiction since the lesser forms of literature had not been traditionally ascribed to particular individuals 39 Hu next built on Cai Yuanpei s investigations of the printing history of the early editions to prepare reliable reading texts The final and in some respects most important task was to study the vocabulary and usage of Cao s Beijing dialect as a basis for Modern Mandarin In the 1920s scholars and devoted readers developed Hongxue or Redology into both a scholarly field and a popular avocation Among the avid readers was the young Mao Zedong who later claimed to have read the novel five times and praised it as one of China s greatest works of literature 40 The influence of the novel s themes and style are evident in many modern Chinese prose works The early 1950s was a rich period for Redology with publication of major studies by Yu Pingbo Zhou Ruchang who as a young scholar had come to the attention of Hu Shih in the late 1940s published his first study in 1953 which became a best seller 41 But in 1954 Mao personally criticized Yu Pingbo for his bourgeois idealism in failing to emphasize that the novel exposed the decadence of feudal society and the theme of class struggle In the Hundred Flowers Campaign Yu came under heavy criticism but the attacks were so extensive and full of quotations from his work that they spread Yu s ideas to many people who would not otherwise have known of their existence 42 During the Cultural Revolution the novel initially came under fire though it quickly regained its prestige in the following years Zhou Ruchang resumed his lifework eventually publishing more than sixty biographical and critical studies 41 In 2006 Zhou who had long distrusted Gao E s editions and the novelist Liu Xinwu author of popular studies of the novel joined to produce a new 80 chapter version which Zhou had edited to eliminate the Cheng Gao emendations Liu completed an ending that was supposedly more true to Cao s original intent 43 The novel continues to be influential on contemporary Chinese poets such as Middle Generation s An Qi who paid homage to it in her poem To Cao Xueqin 44 Translations and reception in the West edit one of the great monuments of the world s literature Review of the Dream of the Red Chamber by Anthony West The New Yorker 45 Cao utilizes many levels of colloquial and literary language and incorporates forms of classic poetry that are integral to the novel making it a major challenge to translate 46 A 2014 study of fourteen translations of the novel concluded that the work is a challenge even to the most resourceful of translators and the process of rendering it into another language is bound to involve more translation problems techniques and principles than the process of rendering any other literary work Accordingly the aims and achievements of the translators differ widely 47 The first recorded translation into English was in 1812 by the Protestant missionary and sinologist Robert Morrison 1782 1834 who translated part of chapter four for the second volume of his unpublished 1812 book Horae Sinicae In 1816 Morrison did publish a translation of a conversation from chapter 31 in his Chinese language textbook Dialogues and Detached Sentences in the Chinese Language In 1819 the British diplomat and sinologist John Francis Davis 1795 1890 published a short excerpt in the London Journal Quarterly Review Davis also published a poem from chapter 3 in the 1830 Transactions of the Royal Asiatic Society 48 In 1842 Karl Gutzlaff s article Hung Lau Mung or Dreams in the Red Chamber in the sixth volume of the Chinese Repository included translation and criticism of some passages A literal translation of selected passages was published for foreigners learning Chinese by the Presbyterian Mission Press of Ningbo in 1846 49 Edward Charles Bowra of the Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs published a translation of the first eight chapters in 1868 50 and H Bencraft Joly of the first fifty six chapters in 1892 51 The Reverend E J Eitel reviewed Joly s translation and condemned the novel saying that Chinese read it because of its wickedness Herbert Giles whom John Minford called one of the more free thinking British consular officers took a more favorable view in a twenty five page synopsis in 1885 that Minford calls still a useful guide 52 Giles further highlighted it in his A History of Chinese Literature in 1901 53 In 1928 Elfrida Hudson published a short introduction to the novel titled An old old story 54 An abridged translation by Wang Chi Chen which emphasized the central love story was published in 1929 with a preface by Arthur Waley Waley said that we feel most clearly the symbolic or universal value of the characters in the passages which recount dreams Pao Yu Waley continued stands for imagination and poetry and his father for all those sordid powers of pedantry and restriction which hamper the artist 55 In a 1930 review of Wang s translation Harry Clemons of The Virginia Quarterly Review wrote This is a great novel and along with the Romance of the Three Kingdoms it ranks foremost among the novels of classic Chinese literature 56 Although Clemons felt meaning was only fragmentarily revealed in the English translated prose and that many of the incidents and much of the poetry were omitted he nevertheless thought at any rate the effort to read The Dream of the Red Chamber is eminently worth making 56 In 1958 Wang published an expansion on his earlier abridgement though it was still truncated at 60 chapters The stream of translations and literary studies in the West grew steadily building on Chinese language scholarship The 1932 German translation by Franz Kuhn 57 was the basis of an abridged version The Dream of the Red Chamber by Florence and Isabel McHugh published in 1958 58 and a later French version Critic Anthony West wrote in The New Yorker in 1958 that the novel is to the Chinese very much what The Brothers Karamazov is to Russian and Remembrance of Things Past is to French literature and it is beyond question one of the great novels of all literature 45 Kenneth Rexroth in a 1958 review of the McHugh translation describes the novel as among the greatest works of prose fiction in all the history of literature for it is profoundly humane 59 Bramwell Seaton Bonsall finished what is probably the first complete 120 chapter translation in the 1950s Red Chamber Dream but publication was abandoned when Penguin announced the Hawkes project A typescript is available on the web 60 The respected and prolific Yang Hsien yi was commissioned to translate the first complete English version Though he confessed that this was his least favorite of the classic novels Yang began work in 1961 and had finished roughly 100 chapters in 1964 when he was ordered to stop He and his wife Gladys Yang were imprisoned on suspicion of espionage during the Cultural Revolution but they finished the translation as a team after their release in 1974 It was published by Beijing Foreign Language Press as A Dream of Red Mansions in three volumes 1978 1980 61 The second complete English translation to be published was by David Hawkes some century and a half after the first English translation Hawkes was already a recognised redologist and had previously translated Chu Ci when Penguin Classics approached him in 1970 to make a translation which could appeal to English readers After resigning from his professorial position Hawkes published the first eighty chapters in three volumes 1973 1977 1980 62 The Story of the Stone 1973 1980 the first eighty chapters translated by Hawkes and last forty by his son in law John Minford consists of five volumes and 2 339 pages of actual core text not including Prefaces Introductions and Appendices and over 2 800 pages in total 63 The word count of the Penguin Classics English translation is estimated at 845 000 words In a 1980 review of the Hawkes and Minford translation in The New York Review of Books Frederic Wakeman Jr described the novel as a masterpiece and the work of a literary genius 64 Cynthia L Chennault of the University of Florida stated that The Dream is acclaimed as one of the most psychologically penetrating novels of world literature 65 The novel and its author have been described as among the most significant works of literature and literary figures of the past millennium 66 67 The sinologist Oldrich Kral also undertook a Czech translation of the entire novel Sen v cervenem dome Prague Odeon three volumes 1986 1988 Slovak sinologist and philosopher Marina Carnogurska translated into Slovak whole four volumes of the novel Sen o Cervenom pavilone Bratislava Petrus 2001 2003 ISBN 80 88939 25 9 In 2014 an abridged English translation of Dream by writer Lin Yutang resurfaced in a Japanese library Lin s translation about half the length of the original is reportedly not a literal one 68 In a study of fourteen translations into English German French Spanish Laurence K P Wong finds that some challenges to translation are surmountable some insurmountable though translators sometimes hit on surprisingly happy versions that come very close to the original Hawkes however normally came up with versions that are accurate ingenious and delightful Hawkes recreates the meanings and sounds of the original with remarkable precision achieving much greater success than any one of his fellow translators in surmounting the limits of literary translation 69 Another scholar agreed that the Yang s translation is literal in the sense of rendering word for word but argued that the Hawkes translation achieved what should be called a higher level of literalness in the sense of text for text That is Hawkes tries to maintain the range and contrasting levels of usage of the original while the Yangs smooth out the language with a plain international English and add explanations in footnotes 70 Other scholars examined particular aspects of the Yangs translation and the Hawkes and Minford translation The names of some characters sound like the words for their personality traits and some names serve as allusions Hawkes conveys the communicative function of the names rather than lexical equivalence for example Huo Qi is homonymous with the beginning of catastrophe and Hawkes makes the English name Calamity Hawkes sometimes uses Italian Sanskrit terms when Western Christian culture lacks a term for a concept 71 Gladys Yang and Yang Hsien yi prefer literal translation informing readers of names meanings through annotations Zhu Jian chun argued that Hawkes choice to simply translate certain names that are puns makes the author s intentions clearer and that the Yangs choice of transliteration leaves the meaning more elusive even if the transliterated names are more believable as character names Zhu questioned the Yangs translation of Dao Ren as reverend 71 According to Barry Lee Reynolds and Chao Chih Liao the Yangs version contains more faithful translations of religious expressions but is also less readable to English language readers 72 Xuxiang Suo argued Hawkes successfully conveyed the original textual information to foreign readers with smooth and beautiful English but the loss of Chinese culture loaded information is inevitable Mr Yang mostly adopted the way of literal translation trying his best to keep the true and idiomatic Chinese style and national tint 73 Sequels and continuations editOwing to its immense popularity numerous sequels and continuations to the novel have been published even during the Qing era There are currently more than thirty recorded sequels or continuations to the novel including modern ones 74 Modern post 1949 continuations tend to follow after the eightieth chapter and include those by Zhang Zhi 75 Zhou Yuqing 76 Hu Nan 77 and Liu Xinwu 78 Adaptations edit nbsp A scene from Dream of the Red Chamber as depicted in Chinese operaAt least fourteen cinematic adaptations of the Dream of the Red Chamber have been made including the 1944 film directed by Bu Wancang the 1977 Shaw Brothers adaptation starring Sylvia Chang and Brigitte Lin and the 1988 film directed by Xie Tieli 谢铁骊 and Zhao Yuan 赵元 This last film took two years to prepare and three years to shoot and remains at 735 minutes the longest Chinese film ever made 79 In 1981 Jiangsu Song and Dance Ensemble premiered a dance drama version of Dream of the Red Chamber A reworked version was performed in 1982 in Beijing by China Opera and Dance Drama Theatre featuring lead dancer Chen Ailian 80 At least ten television adaptations have been produced excluding numerous Chinese opera adaptations and they include the renowned 1987 television series which is regarded by many within China as being a near definitive adaptation of the novel It was initially somewhat controversial as few Redologists believed a television adaptation could do the novel full justice Producer and director Wang Fulin s decision in employing non professional young actors was vindicated as the television series gained enormous popularity in China The series success owes much to composer Wang Liping 王立平 He set many of the novel s classical verses to music taking as long as four years to deliberate and complete his compositions Other television versions include a 1996 Taiwanese series and a 2010 version directed by Fifth Generation director Li Shaohong Unlike the other great Chinese novels particularly Romance of the Three Kingdoms and Journey to the West the Dream of the Red Chamber has received little attention in the gaming world with only two Chinese language visual novels having been released as of 2017 Hong Lou Meng and Hong Lou Meng Lin Daiyu yu Bei Jingwang 红楼梦 林黛玉与北静王 were both released by Beijing Entertainment All Technology 北京娱乐通 The latter one was released on 8 January 2010 and it is an extended version of the first game with the main heroines of the game fully voiced and additional CG endings An English language opera based on the novel in two acts was composed by Chinese American composer Bright Sheng with libretto by Sheng and David Henry Hwang The three hour opera had its world premiere on 10 September 2016 by the San Francisco Opera For their 2020 album Transience of Life the American art rock band Elysian Fields set several poems from the novel to music In the 2023 video game Limbus Company created by South Korean studio Project Moon character Hong Lu is based on Dream of the Red Chamber He is one of the 12 playable sinners in the game and wields a guandao See also edit nbsp Novels portalReferences editCitations edit About the Novel Introduction Cliffsnotes com Retrieved 2 November 2017 Jonathan Spence The Search for Modern China New York Norton 1990 106 110 a b David Hawkes Introduction The Story of the Stone Volume I Penguin Books 1973 pp 15 19 Vale David Hawkes Liu Ts un yan Alaistair Morrison China Heritage Quarterly of the Australian National University a b c Shang 2010 pp 282 83 Shang 2010 p 283 Minford amp Hegel 1986 p 452 曹雪芹自己销毁了110回 红楼梦 的后30回 Cao Xueqin himself destroyed the 110 chapter Dream of the Red Chambers last 30 chapters ifeng com of Phoenix Television 4 February 2008 Archived from the original on 30 March 2012 Maram Epstein Reflections of Desire The Poetics of Gender in Dream of the Red Chamber Nan Nu 1 1 1999 64 a b Edwards 1994 p 11 64 Yu Anthony C 2001 Rereading the Stone Desire and the Making of Fiction in Dream of the Red Chamber Princeton University Press p 9 ISBN 0 691 09013 0 Ying Bicheng 1983 论 石头记 庚辰本 上海古籍出版社 a b Irene Eber Riddles in the Dream of the Red Chamber in Galit Hasan Rokem and David Dean Shulman eds Untying the Knot On Riddles and Other Enigmatic Modes New York Oxford University Press 1996 p 237 Hu Xianfeng Wang Yang Wu Qiang 2014 Multiple Authors Detection A Quantitative Analysis of Dream of the Red Chamber Advances in Adaptive Data Analysis 06 4 1450012 arXiv 1412 6211 doi 10 1142 S1793536914500125 S2CID 14591011 Li Zhenyu 13 April 2020 Dream of the Red Chamber A book for eternity People s Daily EganBai 2021 p xxiv Yang Weizhen Guo Rongguang 1986 Introduction 红楼梦 辞典 山东文艺出版社 ISBN 7 5329 0078 9 There are entries for 447 named characters Helen Tierney 1999 Women s studies encyclopedia Volume 1 Greenwood Publishing Group p 247 ISBN 0 313 31071 8 Chen 2005 pp 1 2 Wilkinson 2018 p 53 Cao Xueqin Gao E 2006 Chapter 23 Hong Lou Meng 新世界出版社 ISBN 9787801879028 张 利玲 2009 林黛玉形象补论 A Complementary Discussion on Lin Daiyu s Image 红楼梦学刊 1 1 11 33 via CQVIP The Story of the Stone Vol I The Golden Days translated by David Hawkes pp 206 209 300 320 23 See also Jonathan Spence Ch ing in K C Chang ed Food in Chinese Culture Yale University Press 1977 p 279 EganBai 2021 p 16 Quoted by Qiancheng Li in Fictions of Enlightenment University of Hawaii Press 2003 p 19 Cao Xueqin 1986 The Story of the Stone Volume 5 The Dreamer Wakes Translated by Minford John Penguin Classics p 283 Levy 1999 p 15 a b c d Wood Michael 2020 The Story of China The Epic History of a World Power from the Middle Kingdom to Mao and the China Dream First U S ed New York St Martin s Press pp 250 363 364 367 ISBN 978 1 250 20257 4 Chen 2005 pp 31 37 Li Wai yee 2002 On Becoming a Fish Paradoxes of Immortality and Enlightenment in Chinese Literature In Shulman David Stroumsa Guy G eds Self and Self transformation in the History of Religions Oxford University Press p 50 ISBN 9780195148169 In chapter 1 after a second perusal of the book Voiding the Void Daoist supposedly its first reader concludes that its main theme is about love Love is perhaps an inadequate rendering of qing whose range of associations includes desire affection feelings emotions sentiments sentience It is also linked to subjective consciousness imagination aesthetic sensibility Cao Xueqin idealizes qing and raises its transcendent dimension to an almost metaphysical level in doing so he also emphasizes lyrical self containment the power of the mind to dream and imagine a world and the conception of the romantic aesthetic as an alternate sphere of existence To know love is to apprehend its implacable negation Shulman David Stroumsa Guy G eds 1999 Dream Cultures Explorations in the Comparative History of Dreaming Oxford University Press p 39 ISBN 9780195123364 The eighteenth century masterpiece The Story of the Stone Shitouji also known as The Dream of the Red Chamber Hongloumeng is probably the most remarkable example of this dialectic of dream and reality art and life passion and enlightenment nostalgia and knowledge Liu Zaifu and Yunzhong Shu 2008 Reflections on Dream of the red chamber Cambria Press p 115 ISBN 978 1 60497 524 6 Chen 2005 pp 12 15 词语 红楼 的解释 汉典 Chinese Dictionary Archived from the original on 19 July 2011 Retrieved 16 July 2011 Zhou Ruchang 2003 Hong lou duo mu hong 红楼夺目红 作家出版社 p 4 ISBN 7 5063 2708 2 Leo Ou fan Lee Literary Trends I The Quest for Modernity 1895 1927 in John K Fairbank ed Cambridge History of China Vol 12 Republican China 1912 1949 Pt I Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1983 455 Yu 1997 pp 119 121 Wang Guowei as quoted in Lin Yutang s appreciation of The Red Chamber Dream Renditions Spring 1974 p 23 Saussy Haun 2003 The Age of Attribution Or How the Honglou Meng Finally Acquired an Author Chinese Literature Essays Articles Reviews 25 119 132 doi 10 2307 3594284 JSTOR 3594284 Li Zhisui The Private Life of Chairman Mao New York Random House 1994 p 82 a b Editor s Preface Ruchang Zhou Between Noble and Humble Cao Xueqin and the Dream of the Red Chamber New York Peter Lang 2009 xiv Joey Bonner Yu P ing Po and the Literary Dimension of the Controversy over Hung Lou Meng The China Quarterly 67 1976 546 581 doi 10 1017 S0305741000035517 Merle Goldman Literary Dissent in Communist China Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 1967 Conspiracy of the Red Mansions Danwei 6 December 2006 Ying Li hua 2010 An Qi Historical Dictionary of Modern Chinese Literature The Scarecrow Press p 5 a b West Anthony 22 November 1958 Through a Glass Darkly The New Yorker Li Liyan The Stylistic Study of the Translation of A Dream of Red Mansions in Chinese 伟大不朽的古典现实主义作品 红楼梦 是我国古典小说艺术成就的最高峰 Wong 2014 p 12 487 Gray Ronald The Stone s Curious Voyage to the West A Brisk Overview of Honglou Meng s English Translation History and English Hongxue Journal of Sino Western Communication 3 2 December 2011 Robert Thom The Chinese Speaker or Extracts from Works Written in the Mandarin Language as Spoken at Peking Ningpo Presbyterian mission Press 1846 E C Bowra The China Magazine Hong Kong Noronha amp Sons 1868 1870 University of Virginia Chinese Text Initiative This etext contains only the Preface and Chapter 1 Chinese Text Initiative Archived from the original on 14 October 2011 Retrieved 12 October 2011 The Dream of the Red Chamber or Hung Lou Meng Hong Kong Kelly amp Walsh 1891 1892 Hung Lou Meng from the Project Gutenberg Hong Kong Kelly amp Walsh 1892 1893 paper published edition is also available Wildside Press ISBN 0 8095 9268 1 and Hard Press 3 November 2006 ISBN 1 4069 4079 8 Text of the 1892 1893 English translation at University of Adelaide rpr with a new foreword by John Minford 1982 1986 Tokyo North Clarendon Vt 2010 ISBN 0 8048 4096 2 Minford John 1999 Rereading the Stone China Review International 6 2 308 309 doi 10 1353 cri 1999 0035 JSTOR 23732171 S2CID 144438620 Herbert Allen Giles The Hung Lou Meng 红楼梦 Commonly Called the Dream of the Red Chamber Monograph S l Read 16th of April 1885 A History of Chinese Literature pp 355 384 The China Journal of Science and Art VII 1 January 1928 7 15 Dream of the Red Chamber Wang Chi Chen New York Doubleday London Routledge 1929 enlarged version New York Twayne 1958 ISBN 0 385 09379 9 a b Clemons Harry 1930 Book Reviews The Dream of the Red Chamber The Virginia Quarterly Review 6 2 Der Traum Der Roten Kammer Leipzig Insel verlag 1932 New York Pantheon 1958 ISBN 0 8371 8113 5 Available at Open Library link Rexroth Kenneth The Chinese Classic Novel in Translation University of Pennsylvania School of Arts and Sciences original from Kenneth Rexroth 1958 Archived from the original on 31 July 2010 Red Chamber Dream Translation from Chinese by B S Bonsall Lib hku hk Archived from the original on 1 January 2013 Retrieved 10 April 2013 Wang 2023 p 313 Gittings John 25 August 2009 Obituary for the Scholar and translator David Hawkes The Guardian Retrieved 16 July 2011 Penguin Classics and Bloomington Indiana University Press five volumes 1973 1980 ISBN 0 14 044293 6 ISBN 0 14 044326 6 ISBN 0 14 044370 3 ISBN 0 14 044371 1 ISBN 0 14 044372 X Wakeman Jr Frederic 12 June 1980 Review Book review The Genius of the Red Chamber The New York Review of Books Chennault Cynthia CHT 4111 Dream of the Red Chamber PDF University of Florida Wood Michael 12 February 2016 Why is China s greatest novel virtually unknown in the west The Guardian a masterpiece that has been called the book of the millennium CNN com Millennium Profiles The LIFE Millennium Time Inc amp CNN com 庄春雷 Lin Yutang s Red Chamber Dream discovered www szdaily com Wong 2014 p 486 Wang 2023 p 307 a b Zhu Jian chun April 2021 The Impact of Chinese and Western Cultural Differences on Pun Translation The Case Study of A Dream of Red Mansion PDF US China Foreign Language 19 80 83 via David Publishing Company Reynolds Barry Lee Chao Chih Liao August 2014 Translating Religion in The Dream of the Red Chamber 3L the Southeast Asian Journal of English Language Studies 20 2 101 116 doi 10 17576 3L 2014 2002 09 Xuxiang Suo June 2015 A Comparative Analysis of Two English Versions of Some Poems in A Dream of Red Mansions PDF Theory and Practice in Language Studies 5 6 1179 1180 doi 10 17507 tpls 0506 08 明清小说研究概论 by 党月异 张廷兴 中央编译出版社 2015 ISBN 978 7511708779 lists 15 alone printed during the Qing dynasty and 17 during the Republican era 1912 1949 张之 红楼梦新补 1984 周玉清 红楼梦新续 1990 胡楠 梦续红楼 2007 刘心武续红楼梦 2011 导演谢铁骊病逝享年89 曾导六部 红楼梦 People in Chinese 20 June 2015 Retrieved 22 May 2018 金秋 1955 2010 Wu dao xin shang Jin Qiu 金秋 Di 2 ban ed Beijing Gao deng jiao yu chu ban she ISBN 9787040287240 OCLC 885593885 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Works cited and further reading edit Chen Weizhao 陈维昭 Hongxue Tongshi 红学通史 A History of Redology Shanghai Shanghai People s Publishing House 2005 ISBN 7208057885 Egan Susan Chan Bai Xianyong eds 2021 A Companion to the Story of the Stone A Chapter by Chapter Guide New York Columbia University Press ISBN 9780231199445 Edwards Louise P 1994 Men and Women in Qing China Gender in the Red Chamber Dream Leiden Brill ISBN 9004101233 Eifring Halvor 2016 Dream of the Red Chamber Oxford Online Bibliographies Chinese Studies Oxford University Press Retrieved 7 April 2017 Annotated bibliography of Western and Chinese language books and articles subscription required C T Hsia Ch VII The Dream of the Red Chamber in The Classic Chinese Novel A Critical Introduction 1968 rpr Ithaca NY East Asia Program Cornell University Cornell East Asia Series 1996 ISBN 1885445741 pp 245 297 Levy Dore J 1999 Ideal and Actual in the Story of the Stone New York Columbia University Press ISBN 0231114060 Zaifu Liu Yunzhong Shu Reflections on Dream of the Red Chamber Amherst N Y Cambria Press 2008 Minford John Hegel Robert E 1986 Hung lou meng 紅樓夢 In Nienhauser William H ed The Indiana Companion to Traditional Chinese Literature Bloomington Indiana University Press pp 452 56 ISBN 0 253 32983 3 Andrew H Plaks Archetype and Allegory in the Dream of the Red Chamber Princeton NJ Princeton University Press 1976 Reprinted Ann Arbor U M I Books on Demand Reprint 1993 Schonebaum Andrew Lu Tina 2012 Approaches to Teaching the Story of the Stone Dream of the Red Chamber New York Modern Language Association of America ISBN 9781603291101 Articles on the nature content and history of the novel Shang Wei 2010 The Literati Era and Its Demise 1723 1840 In Chang Kang i Sun ed The Cambridge History of Chinese Literature Volume II From 1375 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 245 342 ISBN 978 0 521 85559 4 Wang Dylan K 2023 Translating Heteroglossia Comparing Two English Translations of Honglou Meng Archiv orientalni 91 2 307 326 doi 10 47979 aror j 91 2 307 326 S2CID 264901884 Wilkinson Endymion 2018 Chinese History A New Manual Cambridge MA Harvard University Asia Center ISBN 9780998888309 Wong Laurence Kwok Pun 2014 Dreaming Across Languages and Cultures A Study of the Literary Translations of the Hong Lou Meng Cambridge Scholars Publishing ISBN 978 1 4438 6828 0 Shih Ch ang Wu On the Red Chamber Dream A Critical Study of Two Annotated Manuscripts of the 18th Century Oxford The Clarendon Press 1961 Chi Xiao The Chinese Garden as Lyric Enclave A Generic Study of the Story of the Stone Ann Arbor MI Center for Chinese Studies Publications 2001 Yu Anthony 1994 Cao Xueqin a Hongloumeng in Stoler Miller Barbara ed Masterworks of Asian literature in comparative perspective a guide for teaching Armonk N Y M E Sharpe pp 285 299 ISBN 1563242575 1997 Rereading the Stone Desire and the Making of Fiction in Dream of the Red Chamber Princeton N J Princeton University Press ISBN 0691015619 Yu Ying shih 1974 The Two Worlds of Hung Lou Meng Renditions 2 Spring Shatin New Territories Chinese University of Kong Kong Press 5 21 reprinted in Ying shih Yu with the editorial assistance of Josephine Chiu Duke and Michael S Duke Chinese History and Culture Volume 2 Seventeenth Century Through Twentieth Century New York Columbia University Press 2016 pp 134 151 Zhang Xinzhi 1990 How to Read the Hong Lou Meng in Rolston David ed How to Read the Chinese Novel translated by Andrew Plaks Princeton NJ Princeton University Press Translation of a Qing dynasty commentary showing a traditional interpretation Ruchang Zhou Edited by Ronald R Gray Mark S Ferrara Between Noble and Humble Cao Xueqin and the Dream of the Red Chamber New York Peter Lang 2009 Translated by Liangmei Bao and Kyongsook Park ISBN 978 1 4331 0407 7 External links edit nbsp Chinese Wikisource has original text related to this article 紅樓夢 nbsp Chinese Wikisource has original text related to this article 脂硯齋重評石頭記 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dream of the Red Chamber nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Dream of the Red Chamber Bryan Van Norden Guide to Reading Story of the Stone Dream of the Red Chamber Zhang Xiugui CliffsNotes Summary and notes Richard Smith Rice University Dream of the Red Chamber Outline of Vol I of Story of the Stone with comments Article on China Central Television Program about Red Chamber China Daily Raymond Zhou 12 November 2005 Dream of the Red Chamber 紅樓夢 Chinese text with embedded Chinese English dictionary nbsp The Dream of the Red Chamber public domain audiobook at LibriVox Dream of the Red Chamber Afterlives University of Minnesota Eight sections of an on line course including The Text of the Novel Nineteenth Century Responses Twentieth and Twenty first Century Responses The Social World of the Dream Marshall Heather From West to East Conservation of the Chinese novel Dream of the Red Chamber British Library Describes the book conservation work Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dream of the Red Chamber amp oldid 1219253131, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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