Jin Ping Mei
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Jin Ping Mei (金瓶梅; pinyin: Jīn Píngméi, literally "The Plum in the Golden Vase", also translated as "The Golden Lotus") is a Chinese naturalistic novel composed in the vernacular (baihua) during the late Ming Dynasty, attributed to Lanling Xiaoxiao Sheng. The first versions of the novel exist in handwritten scripts, and the first block-printed book was released only in 1610. The more complete version today comprises one hundred chapters.
Jin Ping Mei is sometimes considered to be the fifth classical novel after the Four Chinese Classical Novels (including Journey to the West, Water Margin, The Romance of the Three Kingdoms and Dream of the Red Chamber). It is the first fictional work to depict sexuality in a graphically explicit manner in China, describing in detail the downfall of the Ximen clan during the years 1111-1127 (Southern Song dynasty). Jin Ping Mei takes its name from the three central characters — Pan Jinlian (whose name means "Golden Lotus"); Li Ping-Er, a concubine of Ximen Qing; and Peng Chunmei, a maid who rose to power within the family.
The story centres around Ximen Qing, a social climber and lustful merchant whose wealth allows him a consort of wives and concubines. A key episode of the novel, the seduction of the lascivious, adulterous Pan Jinlian, occurs early in the book and is taken from an episode from Water Margin. After secretly murdering the husband of Pan, Ximen Qing marries her as one of his wives. The story follows the domestic sexual struggles of the women within his clan as they clamour for prestige and influence as the Ximen clan gradually declines in power.
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Evaluation
Known for centuries as pornographic material and banned officially most of the time, the book is nevertheless surreptitiously read by many of the educated class. Only quite recently has it been re-evaluated as literature. The story contains a surprising number of descriptions of sexual toys and coital techniques that would be considered fetish today as well as a large amount of bawdy jokes and oblique sexual euphemisms. Structurally taut, full of classical Chinese poetry and surprisingly mature even as early fiction, it also deals with larger sociological issues, shedding light on the role of women in ancient Chinese society, the sexual politics behind it, while also functioning as a novel of manners and an allegory of human corruption.
Some critics have argued that the highly sexual descriptions are essential, and others have noted its liberating influence on other Chinese novels on matters of sexuality, most notably in A Dream of the Red Chamber. Little is known about the author except for some conjectures that he may be a Taoist priest who wrote to disclose the disintegrating morality and corruption of the late Ming Dynasty. Noted French sinologist Andre Levy hypothesizes that the novel could have actually been written by a woman.
Connection to Water Margin
- This whole story is based on an episode from "Tiger Slayer" Wu Song from Water Margin. The story is about Wu Song avenging the murder of his older brother Wu Da Lang.
- In Water Margin, Ximen Qing was punished at the end by being brutally killed in broad daylight by Wu Song. In Jin Ping Mei however, Ximen Qing lives till the end of the book.
English translations
There are many English translations of Jin Ping Mei. The Golden Lotus (1939), translated by Clement Egerton, is an expurgated complete version, with some more explicit parts rendered into Latin.
The best version of the novel is published by Princeton University Press, translated by David Tod Roy. However to date it remains incomplete: only three of a projected five volumes have been published.
- The Plum in the Golden Vase, or Chin P'ing Mei: Volume One: The Gathering (1993)
- The Plum in the Golden Vase, or Chin P'ing Mei: Volume Two: The Rivals (2001)
- The Plum in the Golden Vase, or Chin P'ing Mei, Volume Three: The Aphrodisiac (2006)
External links
- The Golden Lotus with manhua: http://www.china-on-site.com/pages/comic/comiccatalog7.php
- Chinese Online version: http://www.yifan.net/yihe/novels/gold/gold.html
- Sample of a chapter from David Tod Roy's translation http://www.pupress.princeton.edu/chapters/s7134.htmlde:Jin Ping Mei