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Subject Item
dbr:You_Ming_Lu
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幽明录 You Ming Lu
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You Ming Lu (幽明录, yōu míng lù), also known as 幽冥录 and 幽冥记 is a collection of tales of the supernatural from early medieval China traditionally attributed to Liu Yiqing (刘义庆, 403–442). Known as zhiguai ("accounts of anomalies"), these tales deal with such topics as immortals, ghosts, the afterlife, as well as Buddhist themes such as karmic retribution. The text, originally in either 20 or 30 juan (卷) according to ancient bibliographies, was lost at some point before the Northern Song dynasty of 960 to 1127, but reconstructed from citations from later works. A Qing dynasty recompilation included 158 stories, which was expanded by Lu Xun to bring the total to 265 stories. 《幽明录》,亦作《幽冥录》、《幽冥记》,南朝宋宗室刘义庆集門客所撰志怪小说集,30卷,原书已散佚。鲁迅《古小说钩沉》中辑得二百六十五则。 《周易·系辞》“是故知幽明之故。”注称“幽明,有形无形之象 。”书中所记鬼神灵怪之事,变幻无常,合于此意,故取此名。书中有不少故事与《》﹑《搜神记》﹑《》相同。
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《幽明录》,亦作《幽冥录》、《幽冥记》,南朝宋宗室刘义庆集門客所撰志怪小说集,30卷,原书已散佚。鲁迅《古小说钩沉》中辑得二百六十五则。 《周易·系辞》“是故知幽明之故。”注称“幽明,有形无形之象 。”书中所记鬼神灵怪之事,变幻无常,合于此意,故取此名。书中有不少故事与《》﹑《搜神记》﹑《》相同。 You Ming Lu (幽明录, yōu míng lù), also known as 幽冥录 and 幽冥记 is a collection of tales of the supernatural from early medieval China traditionally attributed to Liu Yiqing (刘义庆, 403–442). Known as zhiguai ("accounts of anomalies"), these tales deal with such topics as immortals, ghosts, the afterlife, as well as Buddhist themes such as karmic retribution. The text, originally in either 20 or 30 juan (卷) according to ancient bibliographies, was lost at some point before the Northern Song dynasty of 960 to 1127, but reconstructed from citations from later works. A Qing dynasty recompilation included 158 stories, which was expanded by Lu Xun to bring the total to 265 stories. You Ming Lu is noteworthy for being one of the earliest known works to display Buddhist influences, and as such had a strong influence on subsequent literature. Like most zhiguai collections, it includes works that had appeared in previous collections, taking 11 stories from Soushen Ji (搜神记), 4 from Lieyi Zhuan (列异传), and one or two stories from a variety of other works. A total of about 35 stories have been traced to previous works, leaving the majority of the stories in this collection as either original or of unknown provenance. Liu Yiqing was born in Pengcheng, today's Xuzhou, during the Jin dynasty, the son of Liu Daolian (刘道憐, 368–422), Prince Jing of Changsha. He is better known as the compiler of the collection Shi Shuo Xin Yu (世说新语, New Account of Tales of the World), which is a quintessential work of the 志人 genre ("accounts of men"). His uncle was Liu Yu, the founding emperor of the Liu Song dynasty who reigned from 420 to 422.
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