Preview

Njnjnj

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
585 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Njnjnj
MORALES, Erika Yvonne
11007702
HUMALIT C36
“Her hands of white jade by a window of snow
Are glimmering on a golden-fretted harp—
And to draw the quick eye of Chou Yu,
She touches a wrong note now and then.”
- Li Tuan
Given that the situation is in the context of the Han and T’ang periods in China, I expect for the musician to be in jeweled crowns with little jingling bells dangling from the edges. The musician might wear something like a court dress, which was the clothing worn during performance in sacrificial ceremonies. This clothing would have characteristics such as square sleeves, sloping necklines, red clothes, red shoes and a cicada-like hat. She would wear make-up as women in these periods wear make-up and even use little-make up boxes that carried their mirror, rouge, and lipstick. The musician is aesthetically pleasing, her eyebrows well plucked and designed, complimenting her face together with her make-up. Also, in the T’ang period, the female empress Wu Zhao was very much influential so I expect for the musician to be highly confident as women were empowered in that period.
From the text, I think that Chou Yu is a strong man of authority. He is strict. He stands up straight and makes minimal movement but is very keen on the music the musician plays. According to research, Zhou Yu, or Chou Yu, was an important general during the Later Han period of the warlords Sun Ce and Sun Quan. He occupied the post of Leader of the court and later became governor of Jiangxa. He was aimed for development in China. He wanted an independent empire in southern China. As a woman, I think that Chou Yu’s strong personality and authoritative stature makes him a very desirable person. Being with someone who has so much power somehow makes you feel that you too, have that much power.
The musician touching every wrong note now and then to get Chou Yu’s attention describes not only the characters themselves, but also, it describes well the dramatic situation

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Shen Fu was a Chinese writer and art dealer who lived during the Qing Dynasty. He had a very strong love for his wife Chen Yun and she is the inspiration for his book “Six Records of a Floating Life”, which vividly describes their life and love together. Shen Fu discusses the happiness that he found in marriage to his cousin Yun, in his first chapter, “Joys of the Wedding Chamber”. He then goes into detail, and is even reminiscent, about enjoying the little things and his experiences with them in the second part of his book, “Pleasure of Leisure”. Next Shen Fu talks about the adversities that he and Yun have to experience, in their sometimes-trying relationship together, with his chapter “The Sorrow of Misfortune”. This is a chapter about his financial burdens and depression that he started to incur from his stress during that time. The final chapter that Shen Fu writes about in his book, is much different than his last one because his spirits are lifted and he describes his love for traveling and taking in the sights of the world with “The Delights of Roaming Afar”. These are the reasons as to why he wrote this book, to share with the world his story of love, adversity, and prosperity all while expressing his deeply rooted admiration and sentiment for his wife, Chen Yun.…

    • 1004 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Kjjkbjkbj

    • 517 Words
    • 3 Pages

    1. The narrator of “The Yellow Wallpaper” undergoes a profound change from the beginning of the story to the end. How is her change revealed in relation to her response to the wallpaper? How does she fell about the change? How do your feeling differ from the narrator’s?…

    • 517 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    He-Shen’s role in the play was the person who made the decision Last Time in this mansion. He was the extreme rich person who had no family and friends. On the other hand, the tour is the person who is making decision This Time of his marriage. He-Shen was a normal child with a well being family. As Feng created the story of his step-mother betrayal (his father and mother die young was true story), He-Shen made arduous efforts to become the richest person of the Qing dynasty. To everyone, He-Shen was like a God who control anything he wants, who had money to do anything he wished, however, he owned everything and lost his true love and motivation. He said that his lake was his only friend, who would never leak any secret, and the only thing he really wanted was his step-mother’s fry tofu, which he could never get…

    • 820 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Fortunate to be born into a family that supported education, Wu Zhou, in her travels with her father, gained a loving parent-child bond that drove her to exceed boundaries and achieve great things. Since her father did not have the chance to become a man of status, she wanted to make him proud and prove society’s standards wrong by outcompeting her opponents—males. Being well versed in education, politics, and discovering her own beauty, she gained position of Talent Wu, or fifth- ranked concubine to Emperor Taizong.…

    • 1175 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    As a colleague of Dr. Jiang, I am aware of her enviable profile as a piano soloist, chamber musician, and collaborative pianist (a term replacing “accompanist” to describe the role the pianist plays in an instrumental or vocal recital performance). I am impressed not only by the high status venues that have sponsored her performances, such as New York’s Lincoln Center, but also by the exceptional musicians with whom she has shared the concert stage. She has performed chamber music and recital programs with a host of renowned performers that include violinist Itzhak Perlman, Cleveland Quartet violinist Donald Weilerstein, Kronos Quartet cellist Sunny Yang, and Emerson Quartet cellist Paul Watkins. Recently she performed a piano…

    • 637 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Mo Tzu

    • 1983 Words
    • 8 Pages

    Music in Mo Tzu’s China was a historical and religiously based event. Music has always been a form of expression in Chinese cultural history, whether it is among the musical festivals of the common people, or the extravagant operas held in the courts of the ruling class aristocracy. Other than these forms of musical entertainment, more critical were the “rites” often closely associated with the “music” of the time. In fact, “rites-music” is a more general term often used to describe these early practices of playing and performing ritualistic forms of music. These forms of music asserted how the upper class was inherently more spiritual, nobler, and better individual beings than the common man. For Mo Tzu, whose fundamental notion is a theme of “universal love” between all men, this notion of ranked relationships just because of the different ways people played and enjoyed music was hypocrisy. In contrast to the Confucian notion of ranking the relationships of kinship and blood relations, Mo Tzu felt that individual births were more like random events, and all men has a responsibility to love himself and others. Mo Tzu’s notions of universal love was not only threatening to the Confucian way of thought, it also threatened the very basic clan-tribal relationship early Chinese governments were formed under. These tribal clans emphasized the superiority of their bloodline, in contrast to the commoners, to justify their heavy taxation and other unequal practices. When Mo Tzu criticizes Music in “Against Music,” he is criticizing the musical practices that have already become synonymous with materialist luxury and class distinction.…

    • 1983 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Chin rereads his essay for three times and finally find out Chou Chin’s intelligent and talent.…

    • 359 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    This paper argues that the Cuiqiao’s character is actually a figment of Gu Qing’s imagination. The Chinese Communist Party assigned Gu Qing to find folk songs to raise the morale of his fellow comrades. However, from a 21st century perspective, it is evident that communism bought about problems in China and the director, Chen Kaige wanted to subtly address these issues using the lyrics sung by the character, Cuiqiao. Cuiqiao is the perfect embodiment of how the Communist Party wanted to introduce communism – alluring, melodic, and welcoming. However, China suffered from internal struggles because the party’s ideality of communism was different from the reality of communism. Due to these two differences, there were opposing views on how the…

    • 2307 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Through telling the story of Xiangzi, Lao She's "Rickshaw" moulds a woman in Hu Niu that is the antithesis of everything that a woman should be in the traditional society of that period. In the time-honoured Chinese culture, there has long been a strong prejudice against women of power. Every unfavourable image has been linked with particularly those who have proved especially formidable. Throughout the histories that have been written by mostly men where views as traditional as Xiangzi's have been prevalent, dominant women have been presented in the most unsympathetic light.…

    • 5078 Words
    • 13 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Saboteur

    • 832 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The setting of a story has a ponderous influence on our perception as it often justifies a character's behavior. The story takes place in Muji city, China. This place maybe is a beautiful place, because Mr. Chiu and his bride select this place for spending their honeymoon. Time seems around 1980s, "the Cultural Revolution was over already and recently the party had been propagating the idea that all citizens are equal before the law."(P635). The concrete statue of Chairman Mao is located in the middle of a square before Muji train station. Experienced the Culture Revolution, people’s opinion of morality has a great changed. Mr. Chiu eager to get justice, but he suffered unjustified treatment. Let we see how Mr. Chiu’s character changed. Finally he became a “saboteur”.…

    • 832 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Tang Romance appeared as a totally new literary form during Tang Dynasty, “Ying-ying’s story” as one of the most famous representative works of Tang Romance, became extremely popular and had a far-reaching influence on later Chinese literature. “Ying-ying’s story”, written by Yuan Zhen, tells of a young scholar named Zhang, who falls in love at first sight with Cui Ying-ying, a declining aristocrat. At first, Cui Ying-ying rejects Zhang’s advances due to the Confucian ethics, but then she voluntarily offers herself to him. Eventually, Zhang then leaves her to the capital for the imperial civil examination, and he abandons her for his own future. Both of them end up marrying other people, and they never see each other again.…

    • 319 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    M. Butterfly Identity

    • 741 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Song also makes sure notice is taken of her delicate and pretty appearance. Song remarks back to Gallimard, “Your history serves you poorly, Monsieur Gallimard. True, there were signs reading “No dogs and Chinamen.” But a woman, especially a delicate Oriental woman—we always go where we please. Could you imagine it otherwise? Clubs in China filled with pasty, big-thighed white women, while thousands of slender lotus blossoms wait just outside the door? The clubs would be empty. We have always held a certain fascination for you Caucasian men, have we not? (2. 4 Hwang). Song has shown to her audience that she has a strong confidence about the female body and face. She explains to Gallimard that her new identity, a delicate Oriental woman, is always welcomed in society. Song also feels a sense of power because although she is a man working for the Chinese government, she feels comfortable in her feminine…

    • 741 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Directed by Chen Kaige, a highly acclaimed fifth-generation Chinese film director, Farewell My Concubine has received many international film awards and nominations; among them are the Best Foreign Film and the Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival in 1993. In the film, Cheng Dieyi, a Peking Opera actor playing the leading female characters, becomes obsessed with his role as the concubine of the King of Chu and blurs his stage role with the real life he leads. The circumstances in which one grows up in are critical factors in shaping his or her sense of self-identity. This paper attempts to explore the gender identity troubles that Cheng Dieyi has undergone in his self-identification and sexuality in the context of the environment of his upbringing.…

    • 1758 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Zhou Yu

    • 679 Words
    • 3 Pages

    1. Given the situation, one can imagine a beautiful woman with her golden-fretted harp in her splendid clothes probably called a Hanfu (漢服) which was the term used to describe the clothes of women during the Han Dynasty. The room was like a typical rich-owned house in Chinese TV shows that the present age can watch today. The atmosphere was a bit low and the room was full of red furniture and fixtures. There were beautifully carved lions and dragons around the room especially on poles supporting the whole building. Everything was nicely decorated. There were different antiques displayed, porcelain vases, silk banner from Hunan province, and some ceramic jars. The ceiling was carefully designed reflecting the glory of their ancestors while showing probably prosperity and the like. The artistically made sliding door is opened wherein the musician can see her husband.…

    • 679 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Dance Performance Review

    • 746 Words
    • 3 Pages

    On the 3 November 2012, my classmates and I were to attend a music dance concert in the Feddersen Recital Hall in Mount San Antonio College. we were being seat in the circle, where I can observed most things from the floor above. The hall is quite a small grand but in simple and elegant way, and with simple lighting. I love it although it is not as large-scale as others performance at Los Angeles downtown.Before the performance begins, there was whispered in the hall as the spectators were discussing what to anticipate from this dance concert and most of them dress in semi formal. As for the performers, they carefully and delicately tune their instruments to the precise pitch and their dressing and preparing for this performance.…

    • 746 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays

Related Topics