Verified Document

Chinese Poetry Term Paper

Chinese Poetry - critical analysis of Wuchi Liu's Lord of the River Hsiang & in the Wilds there is a Dead Doe Women Subjugation & Nature as Refuge

Analyses of the poems Lord of the River Hsiang and In the Wilds there is a Dead Doe by Wuchi Liu showed two emergent themes reflecting Chinese culture: the society's norm and regard towards their treatment of women and the use of nature to personify beauty and solace that women it (nature). The following discussion and analyses centers on a comparison of the two poems, centering on the similarities and differences that Liu utilized in using these emergent themes: that is, that of women subjugation and nature as refuge for women.

Evidently manifested in Liu's poems is the presence of women characters as subjects of each poem. Each illustrates the woman character as delicate, beautiful, and "fair," qualities that serve as stereotypes to illustrate Chinese women. "In the wilds"...

Furthermore, what sets apart the two poems from each other is the use of a third person speaker in "In the wilds" and the first person (the woman's character) in "Lord."
However, beneath these profuse use of imagery lies the main theme of each poem: women who are waiting for their lover or 'man of their life,' whose displayed patience and docility in the poems illustrates their voluntary subjugation to men. Indeed, as men went on with their lives battling or traveling in other places, women are held within the confines of their home and natural surroundings to patiently wait for their lover's return.

Lord" expresses the sorrow and eventual acceptance of the woman's plight as…

Cite this Document:
Copy Bibliography Citation

Sign Up for Unlimited Study Help

Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.

Get Started Now