WANG Li. Oral Literature's Nature, Sources and the Leading Narration of Chi Po Zi Zhuan (Autobiography of Infatuated footuated Women)[J]. JOURNAL OF BEIJING UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY(SOCIAL SCIENCES EDITION), 2004, 4(1): 86-90.
    Citation: WANG Li. Oral Literature's Nature, Sources and the Leading Narration of Chi Po Zi Zhuan (Autobiography of Infatuated footuated Women)[J]. JOURNAL OF BEIJING UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY(SOCIAL SCIENCES EDITION), 2004, 4(1): 86-90.

    Oral Literature's Nature, Sources and the Leading Narration of Chi Po Zi Zhuan (Autobiography of Infatuated footuated Women)

    • The narration of female stories and personal feeling in their own words in ‘Chi Po Zi Zhuan' directly follows the example of San Qu (a type of popular verse) of Yuan dynasty. In ‘Tian Ye Zuo Ye' and novels of Tang Dynasty are previously recorded the account of women's singing their own praises. This narration mode of flashback is not an original creation people usually think but has its historical origins of Literature. The account of infatuated women (Chi Po Zi) not noly includes the ethic doctrine of warning people against doing evil things but also has lots of features of oral literature.
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