清代 List of Authors
Yu YueCao XueqinNa LanxingdeLv Fu
Gu YanwuWang ShizhenYuan MeiWang Fuzhi
Shang QiuYi MingLi QingfuGao E
Pu SonglingWu JingziLi RuzhenXing Shijushi
Shou PiaowengFu ChaduichongYu HuaiWang Jingqi
Ge XucunWang TaoBao YangshengShen Qifeng
Ji YunSheng ShuiainajushiYuan HuyusouChu Renhuo
Ru LianjushiQian CaiLi YutangYu Shaoyu
Xi YintangzhurenHao GuzhurenWang JiGuan Wozhaizhuren
Song ZishanrenLi QingLiu YingyangGuo Anrui
Tan MengdaorenYang ZhiheWu YuantaiGuo Xiaoting
Hai ShangduxiaoziYan XiazhurenZui YueshanrenYang Jingchang
Mo GoudaorenMan TuoluoshizhuLv XiongWei Wenzhong
Cui XiangchuanYu HuatangzhurenDan YukunWen Kang
Tang YunzhouHai ShangjianchiWu XuanLi Baichuan
Wu Jingzi
清代  (1701 ADDecember 11, 1754 AD)
Last Name:
First Name: 敬梓
Name and Alias: 敏轩
Web/Pen/Nick Name: 粒民; 文木老人; 秦淮寓客
Township: 浙江温州
Birth Place: 安徽全椒

Read works of Wu Jingzi at 小说之家
Wu Jingzi (simplified Chinese吴敬梓traditional Chinese吳敬梓pinyinWú JìngzǐWade–GilesWu Ching-tzu, 1701—January 11, 1754) was a Chinese scholar and writer who was born in the city now known as Quanjiao, Anhui and who died in Yangzhou, Jiangsu. Wu Jingzi is the author of a famous satirical novel titled Rulin waishi or The Unofficial History of the Scholars.

 

Biography

Wu Jingzi Memorial Hall in Quanjiao CountyChuzhou.

Wu was born into a well-to-do family. His father Wu Linqi (吳霖起) was a Qing official, but Wu Jingzi himself met with no success. He attempted the Jinshi examination, but placed only at the county level. Poverty stricken by the age of thirty-two, he moved to Nanjing, where he met and acquainted himself with many government officials.

Wu's family may have had ties to the famous philosophers Yan Yuan (颜元) and Li Gong (李塨). The philosophers emphasized the importance of ritual in Neo-Confucianism and may have influenced Wu's novel.

While in Nanjing, in 1740, he started his famous novel Rulin waishi. There is a museum in his honor located in his hometown of Quanjiao county, now Chuzhou.

Notes

  1. ^ Ellen Widmer; Roddy, Stephen J. (1999). "Review of Literati Identity and Its Fictional Representations in Late Imperial China". Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies. Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies, Vol. 59, No. 1. 59 (1): 290–300. doi:10.2307/2652696JSTOR 2652696.

References


    

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