Dying for Love in The Peony Pavilion and Romeo and Juliet英语专业毕业论文.doc
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1、Dying for Love in The Peony Pavilion and Romeo and Juliet IntroductionThe Peony Pavilion and Romeo and Juliet are two extraordinary canonical works about feverish love on the international stage of drama. The Peony Pavilion was written in 1598 by the famous Chinese dramatist Tang Xianzu of the Ming
2、Dynasty. It has been referred to by some critics as the Chinese version of William Shakespeares Romeo and Juliet, which was written just two years earlier in 1596. Tang Xianzu (1550-1617) and William Shakespeare (1564-1616), were contemporaries living in vastly different cultures. In the two works u
3、nder study in this paper, the shared theme of the hero and the heroine pursuing genuine love relentlessly, even to the sacrifice of death, forms a very interesting perspective from which we can consider the way in which dying for love is presented in two significant works of Western and Eastern dram
4、a.Notes I would like to express my appreciation to Marcia McDonald and James Wells, both Shakespearean scholars at Belmont University, to David Jones of the Southeast Regional Conference of Asian Studies, to Daoist specialist Ronnie Littlejohn of Belmont University, and to Farley Richmond of the Uni
5、versity of Georgia for their many suggestions and improvements in this paper. The two texts both illustrate the universal subject of love. Both dramas depict the fervent love and burning passion of a young couple. Both texts explore the relationship between love and death and the valuable meaning cr
6、eated by lovers dying for love. In these two works death turns out to be the sacrifice required as the remedy for lovers who cannot have their beloved. In this comparison of these two works I will first provide an overview of each text. Since this paper was first delivered on January 13, 2005 at The
7、 Hawaii International Conference on Arts and Humanities, co-sponsored by the East West Council for Education and the Asia-Pacific Institute of Peking University, I felt that I should offer an overview of both texts. It seemed to me that perhaps some Western readers might not be familiar with The Peo
8、ny Pavilion and some Chinese readers might require a reminder about the basics of Romeo and Juliet. Then, I will reconstruct how each play utilizes the idea of dying for love, giving more extended discussion of The Peony Pavilion. After laying this groundwork, I will pursue my principal objective wh
9、ich is to make some comparisons about how “dying for love” is presented in the two texts. This final stage of the paper will give me an opportunity to make some concluding observations about what both authors say concerning the life-threatening and life-givingnature of love, and how this is a reflec
10、tion of their different cultural and literary world views.Overview of the TextsThe Peony Pavilion, also translated as The Return of the Soul, is called Mudan Ting 牡丹亭 in Chinese. Written in a beautifully poetic style, the drama revolves around the love story of Liu Mengmei 柳瞢梅 (Willow Dreaming Plum)
11、, a young scholar, and Du Liniang杜麗娘, the daughter of a high official in Nanan in southern China. In a visit to the family garden at the back of the official residence, Liniang falls asleep and is approached in a dream by Mengmei, with whom she then has a romantic affair in the Peony Pavilion. Awake
12、ning from her dream, she becomes lovesick (xiangsi bing 相思病) and inconsolable in her longing for Mengmei. She eventually pines away with a broken heart in the seclusion of her maidenly chamber in spite of the efforts to save her by a female Daoist spiritual medium and her pharmacologist, Teacher Che
13、n. Before she dies, she paints a self-portrait which is interred under a stone in the garden alongside her remains beside a plum tree. Of course, Xianzu places the burial under a plum tree to reveal his belief in the love or marriage affinity between Liniang and Liu Mengmei, whose name means “willow
14、 dreaming plum.”After her death, Mengmei comes into the foreground of the play. We see him on his way to the imperial examination in Hangzhou. But he falls ill at Nanan and is given a resting-place in the Du family garden. Walking in the garden, he happens to discover Liniangs portrait and he spends
15、 many hours of longing and fond gazing at her lovely form. Immediately he develops a deep feeling that he knows the woman in the portrait from a dream in his past. One night, Liniang as a ghost appears to him and yet they are able to renew the passionate relationship they enjoyed in their shared dre
16、am in the past. At her request, Mengmei opens Liniangs coffin and she is revived because she has found her love. The two young lovers marry in a hurry. Then, worried by the news of a war that had spread to her fathers new governing district, Liniang sends her husband to look for her parents, taking
17、her portrait as an authentication of who he is. However, instead of being honored as his son-in-law, Governor Du has Mengmei arrested and accuses him of robbing Liniangs grave. Later, even when Liniang herself appears in front of her father, he persists in refusing to believe in her resurrection. Fi
18、nally, only with the help of the emperors testimony and royal decree does he acknowledge her identity and the two lovers marriage is sanctioned.The story of Romeo and Juliet is a glamorous story of romantic love at first sight followed by the two lovers dying for love. Romeo and Juliet are from the
19、two feuding noble families in Verona: the Montagues and the Capulets. At a masquerade ball in the house of Capulet, Romeo catches his first glimpse of Juliet and is immediately overcome by her beauty. Juliet likewise becomes lovesick and both pledge to seal their love by marrying. With the aid of Fr
20、iar Laurence, they are married in secret.Just after the wedding, a street brawl erupts between the two feuding factions. Romeos friend, Mercutio, is killed by Juliets cousin, Tybalt. In retaliation, Romeo kills Tybalt. As punishment for his crime, Romeo is exiled to Mantua. The lovers enjoy just one
21、 night together before he must leave or face execution. They part at dawn. Meanwhile Juliets parents insist that she marry Lord Paris. In order to avoid this, Juliet feigns her own death as part of a plan to reunite with Romeo and live happily in a new place. Romeo gets the news second-hand that Jul
22、iet has died. But what he does not receive is a letter from Friar Lawrence explaining the ploy. Grief-stricken, he rushes back to Verona, finds Juliet apparently dead in the tomb, and he kills himself by drinking poison. Juliet wakes up and finds her beloved Romeo dead beside her, and she uses a dag
23、ger from Romeos belt to kill herself. Thus both characters die for love.Reconstructing the Theme of Dying for Love in The Peony PavilionIn the history of Chinese literature numerous works are built around the theme of love. The famous tragic tale of Liang Shanbo and Zhu Yingtai 梁山伯与祝英台 in the sevent
24、eenth century is still a household favorite in China. People are carried away by the two lovers commitment to each other and their courageous choice of dying so as to be bound together. There are many ways in which the story of Liang Shanbo and Zhu Yintai is more like Romeo and Juliet than is The Pe
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