The Courtesan's Memory, Voice, and Late Ming Drama

By Peng Xu

Subjects: Asian Studies, China, History, Chinese History, Theater and Performance
Paperback : 9780472057221, 232 pages, 16 images, 8 tables, 6 x 9, September 2025
Hardcover : 9780472077229, 232 pages, 16 images, 8 tables, 6 x 9, September 2025
Ebook : 9780472222018, 232 pages, 16 images, 8 tables, 6 x 9, September 2025
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Tracing the forgotten impact of courtesans in Chinese theater

Table of contents

List of Illustrations
List of Tables
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Chapter 1 The Courtesan’s Memorial Archive of Northern Drama
Chapter 2 Improvisation and Musical Modernity: The Courtesan’s Memory in the Transition from Xiansuo to Kunqu
Chapter 3 Musical Eroticism and the Evolution of Taste
Chapter 4 The Courtesan and Two Great Kunqu Plays
Coda
Appendix A: New Chuanqi Plays from the Era (1570–1600)
 

Description

Peng Xu’s The Courtesan’s Memory, Voice, and Late Ming Drama argues that courtesans of the era played an active role in the theater and their impact manifested in Chinese literary history, albeit concealed or erased. In the late Ming dynasty (1368–1644), theater was dominated by male performers with professional actresses largely absent from the stage, unlike in the Yuan dynasty (1271–1368), where women performed without restriction in theater troupes. Despite the prevailing assumption that women played no part in the theatrical movement, The Courtesan’s Memory, Voice, and Late Ming Drama illuminates how courtesans, as serious theater artists and playwrights, left a significant mark on the male-dominated dramatic and literary landscapes. This study profoundly remaps the textbook narratives of gender bias, challenges modern prejudices prevalent in the literary history of Chinese drama, and reveals how theatrical conditions and writing styles shifted to accommodate courtesan performances.
 
Utilizing a wide range of sources such as scripts, city guides, biographies, diaries, letters, wood-block illustrations, and paintings, this study distinguishes itself from earlier studies of Chinese courtesans by not thematizing courtesans for their allegorical values, but rather pinpointing their agency in shaping the features of Chinese theater and recognizing courtesans as a source of creativity and development in the medium. Xu’s focus on courtesan performance culture allows for fresh readings of canonical Chinese plays, opening up new ways of understanding the history of Chinese drama written by women, thus deviating from standard historiography based solely on the writings of men.

 

Peng Xu is Associate Professor of the Institute of Humanities at ShanghaiTech University.

The Courtesan's Memory, Voice, and Late Ming Drama is an excellent study that examines the historical agency of a peripheral group—talented female theater artists in the demimonde—and their contribution to the rise of the Kunqu theater. This book is a welcome addition to existing scholarship in late imperial China on female representation, agency, and performance.”

- Xiaoqiao Ling, Arizona State University

“The book remarkably delivers its promise, defamiliarizing almost everything we know about Chinese theater from a very refreshing perspective, filling out massive missing gaps of early modern Chinese history with previously ignored evidence, and convincingly establishing gender as the central category in these historical investigations. The Courtesan's Memory, Voice, and Late Ming Drama also showcases an innovative method of studying the ephemeral—sound, music, singing, performance—that has been evasive from historical research.”

- Ling Hon Lam, University of California, Berkeley