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Chinese Literature
Classics category (jingbu 經部)


The section of Confucian Classics (jingbu 經部) is the first of the four traditional categories (sibu 四部) into which Chinese literature was divided. The term jing 經 "warp" designates a book with canonical claim, often written by representants of philosophical traditions or religious groups, like the Mojing 墨經 "Mohist canon”, Daodejing 道德經 "Classic of the way and the virtue". Some other books with the title "classic" were called so in order to underline its importance and to attract a wider readership, like the Shanhaijing 山海經, or the Chajing 茶經.
A small group of books already obtained the status of a common classic during the late Western Zhou period 西周 (11th cent.- 770 BCE; Shangshu 尚書, Shijing 詩經, Yijing 易經). The Confucians as experts on history and rituals "occupied" these classics and compiled a canon of six classics (liujing 六經: Yi 易 "Changes", i.e. divination, Shu 書 "Documents", Shi 詩 "Songs", Li 禮 "Rituals", Yue 樂 "Music", and Chunqiu 春秋 "Historiography"), each representing a style of literature and a field of ritual activity. Later on, other Confucian writings were included in this canon, resulting in the corpus of 13 Classics (shisanjing 十三經) from the Southern Song period 南宋 (1127-1279) on.
The Daoists also called their important writings jing, and the Buddhists used the word jing to translate the Sanskrit word sūtra "teaching" (literally: chain, thread [of sermons]). In Chinese literature the word jing is contrasted with the word wei 緯 "weft", which designates a writing of less paramount status but useable as an explanation to the classics or an alternative interpretation of ideas.
Except the Five Classics (wujing 武經) Yijing, Shangshu, Shijing, Liji and Chunqiu the section of Confucian Classics includes the "Confucian Analects" Lunyu 論語, a collection of sayings by Confucius, the classic on filial piety Xiaojing 孝經, three books on rituals and etiquette (Liji 禮記, Yili 儀禮, Zhouli 周禮), three canonized commentaries to the Chunqiu (Zuozhuan 左傳, Gongyangzhuan 公羊傳, Guliangzhuan 穀梁傳), and the book Mengzi 孟子. The canonized gloss book Erya 爾雅 is included in the section on lexicography. The books Lunyu, Mengzi, Zhongyong and Daxue have been assembled to the corpus of the "Four Books" (sishu 四書). The section of the ritual books includes six parts, one for each of the three books, books commenting all three of them (sanli zongyi 三禮總義), books on all kinds of rituals (tongli 通禮) and miscellaneous books on rites (za lishu 雜禮書). The sequence of the classics has practically never changed over time.
Because there was probably never a physical classic on music, books on music were, apart from a few exceptions, from the Song period on distributed into other categories. The compilers of the Siku quanshu added a vast amount of commentaries and interpretations to the classics in this sections, as well as four sub-classics, the Shangshu dazhuan 尚書大傳, Hanshi waizhuan 韓詩外傳, Da Dai liji 大戴禮記 and Chunqiu fanlu 春秋繁露. The Yijing section includes 169 books, the Shangshu section 57, the Shijing section 62, the whole section on ritual books 83 books, the section on the Chunqiu 114 books, that on the Xiaojing 11 books, books commenting all the Five Classics 32, and those on the Four Books 62. The category of the Confucian Classics also includes the books of the so-called "minor learning" (xiaoxue 小學) which mainly includes lexicographic books, i. e. dictionaries.

The Five Classics 五經
書名TitleComposer(s)
易經 (周易)Yijing (Zhouyi)
尚書 (書經)Shangshu (Shujing)
尚書大傳Shangshu dazhuan(Han) 伏勝 Fu Sheng
詩經 (毛詩)Shijing (Maoshi)
韓詩外傳Hanshi waizhuan(Han) 韓嬰 Han Ying
禮記Liji(Han) 戴聖 Dai Sheng
周禮Zhouli
儀禮Yili
大戴禮記Da Dai Liji(Han) 戴德 Dai De
春秋左傳
左氏傳
Chunqiu
Zhuozhuan (Zuoshizhuan)

(Zhou) 左丘明 Zuo Qiuming
公羊傳Gongyangzhuan(Zhou) 公羊高 Gongyang Gao
穀梁傳Guliangzhuan(Zhou) 穀梁淑 Guliang Shu
春秋繁露Chunqiu fanlu(Han) 董仲舒 Dong Zhongshu
孝經Xiaojing
爾雅Erya
The Four Books 四書
孟子Mengzi(Zhou) 孟軻 Meng Ke
論語Lunyu
中庸Zhongyong(Zhou) 孔伋 Kong Ji
大學Daxue
Yue Books on Music
小學 Xiaoxue Lexicography
蒙學 Mengxue Elementary learning (originally no traditional section)
Chinese literature according to the four-category system

July 24, 2010 © Ulrich Theobald · Mail