From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chinese poet
Cai Wan (1695-1755), was a Chinese poet.
[1]
[2]
She was the daughter of the noble official
Cao Yurong and married to the cabinet minister
Gao Quizhou .
[3] She was educated within Confucianism, and published her own collection of poems.
[4] Cai Wan had an acknowledged influence as the adviser of her spouse, who reportedly confided his suggestions to her before introducing them to the government.
References
^ Robertson, Maureen (1997-04-01),
"7 Changing the Subject: Gender and Self-inscription in Authors' Prefaces and "Shi" Poetry" , 7 Changing the Subject: Gender and Self-inscription in Authors' Prefaces and "Shi" Poetry , Stanford University Press, pp. 171–218,
doi :
10.1515/9780804765916-010/pdf?licensetype=restricted ,
ISBN
978-0-8047-6591-6 , retrieved 2024-02-29
^ Xu, Sufeng (2013-01-01).
"Domesticating Romantic Love during the High Qing Classical Revival: The Poetic Exchanges between Wang Zhaoyuan (1763-1851) and Her Husband Hao Yixing (1757-1829)" . NAN NÜ . 15 (2): 219–264.
doi :
10.1163/15685268-0152P0002 .
ISSN
1387-6805 .
^ Idema, Wilt L.
"Poetry, Gender, and Ethnicity: Manchu and Mongol Women Poets in Beijing (1775-1875)" . escholarship.mcgill.ca . Retrieved 2024-02-29 .
^ Stefanowska, Lily Xiao Hong Lee, Clara Lau, A. D. (2016-06-11).
Biographical Dictionary of Chinese Women: v. 1: The Qing Period, 1644-1911 . New York: Routledge.
doi :
10.4324/9781315706115/biographical-dictionary-chinese-women-1-qing-period-1644-1911-lily-xiao-hong-lee-stefanowska-clara-lau .
ISBN
978-1-315-70611-5 . {{
cite book }}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (
link )