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sao

Chinese literature

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comparison with fu

  • In fu

    …to the more subjective, lyrical sao. Its prosody was freer than that of the sao, the rhyme pattern being less restrictive. The elements of the fu form include a long line, caesura, and the use of balanced parallel phrases. The use of rhyme places it somewhere between poetry and prose.

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Chinese:
“morality books”; literally “good books”
Wade-Giles romanization:
shan-shu
Related Topics:
Chinese literature

shanshu, in Chinese religion, popular texts devoted to a moral accounting of actions leading to positive and negative merit. These works often combine traditional Confucian notions of filial piety (xiao) and reciprocity, Daoist ideas of taking no action contrary to nature (wuwei; literally “nonaction”), and especially Buddhist ideas of karmic retribution. First appearing in the Song dynasty, these were nonrevealed works related to popular revealed stories called baojuan or “precious scriptures.” They continue to be popular in Chinese communities.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Matt Stefon.