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Andrew H. Plaks

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Andrew Henry Plaks(Chinese:Phổ an địch;pinyin:Pǔ Āndí;born 1945) is an Americansinologistwho specializes in the study of the vernacular fiction of theMingandQingdynasties. From 1973 to 2007, he taught atPrinceton University,becoming full professor in 1980. He moved to theHebrew University of Jerusalemin 2007, where he became Professor of East Asian Studies.[1]

In 1968, he married Livia Basch (1947–2013), and they had two sons, Jason and Eric.[2]

Academic career

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Plaks studied as an undergraduate in the Department of Oriental Studies at Princeton University, graduatingsumma cum laudewith an A.B. in 1967. He stayed on at Princeton University for graduate study in East Asian Studies. He obtained his Ph.D. in 1973 with a dissertation onArchetype and allegory in the Hung-Lou Meng.He was subsequently offered a position in the Department of East Asian Studies at Princeton University, becoming an associate professor in 1976, and a full professor in 1980. In 2007, he retired from Princeton University, and moved to Israel to take up a position at theHebrew University of Jerusalem,where he became Professor of East Asian Studies.[1]

Contributions to the field

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Plaks' 1987 bookFour Masterworks of the Ming Novel,which won theJoseph Levenson Book Prize,is an analysis of a group of Ming dynasty novels which Plaks argues changed the genre:Romance of the Three Kingdoms,Water Margin,Jin Ping Mei,andJourney to the West.Ellen Widmer, writing in theJournal of Asian Studies,says that the book creates "a far-reaching hypothesis about the consolidation of the novel form in China", namely, that the four novels can be taken as a milestone.[3]He identifies a "figural density" and establishes that the key to understanding the novels is the use of irony, by which he means "every possible disjunction between what is said and what is meant". According to Plaks the novels ask serious questions about sexuality, selfhood, heroism, power, reality, and they offer serious Neo-Confucian answers.[3]

Another literary scholar, Paul Ropp, says that Plaks pays special attention to the 16th century editors, authors, and commentators who played different roles than those in earlier times. He also points out structural differences, such as their "paradigmatic length of one-hundred chapters [with one exception], narrative rhythms based on division into ten-chapter units, further subdivisions into building blocks of three- or four chapter episodes, contrived symmetries between the first and second halves of the texts, special exploitation of opening and closing sections, as well as certain other schemes of spatial and temporal ordering, notably the plotting of events on seasonal or geographical grids".[4]Ropp says that although not everybody may agree with all of Plaks' ideas, he has pioneered the sophisticated criticism of the traditional Chinese novel, and his emphasis on the use of irony in the novels is especially important.[4]

In 2018, the first volume ofDream of the Red Chamber,covering chapters 1-27, was published in Hebrew, translated jointly by Plaks and Amira Katz. This is the first translation of the novel into the Hebrew language.[5]

Bibliography

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  • Plaks, Andrew H. (1976).Archetype and Allegory in the Dream of the Red Chamber.Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press.ISBN0691046166.[6]
  • —; DeWoskin, Kenneth J. (1977).Chinese Narrative: Critical and Theoretical Essays.Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press.ISBN0691063281.
  • — (1978)."Full-Length Hsiao-Shuo and the Western Novel: A Generic Reappraisal"(PDF).New Asia Academic Bulletin.1:163–176.
  • — (1980). "Shui-Hu Chuan and the Sixteenth-Century Novel Form: An Interpretive Reappraisal".Chinese Literature: Essays, Articles, Reviews.2(1): 3–53.doi:10.2307/495478.JSTOR495478.
  • — (1985). "After the Fall: Hsing-Shih Yin-Yüan Chuan and the Seventeenth-Century Chinese Novel".Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies.45(2): 543–580.doi:10.2307/2718972.JSTOR2718972.
  • — (1987).The Four Masterworks of the Ming Novel: Ssu Ta Ch'i-Shu.Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press.ISBN0691067082.
  • — (1993).Minh đại tiểu thuyết tứ đại kỳ thư (Ming Dai Xiao Shuo Si Da Qi Shu).Translated by thẩm hanh thọ (Shen Hengshou). Beijing Shi: Zhongguo he ping.ISBN7800372618.(translation ofThe Four Masterworks)
  • —; Peterson, Willard J.; Yu, Yingshi; Ch'en, Ta-tuan; Mote, Frederick W., eds. (1994).The Power of Culture: Studies in Chinese Cultural History.Hong Kong: Chinese University Press.ISBN9622015964.
  • — (2006), Moretti, Franco (ed.),The Novel in Pre-Modern China,Princeton: Princeton University Press
  • — (2003).Hồng lâu mộng phê ngữ thiên toàn (Hong Lou Meng Pi Yu Pian Quan).Beijing: Beijing da xue chu ban she.ISBN7301059132.
  • Zisi(2004).דרך האמצע וקיומה[The Doctrine of the Mean]. Translated by Plaks, Andrew H.; Eber, Irene. Bialik Institute.
  • Zengzi.תורת הגדול[Great Learning] (in Hebrew). Translated by Andrew Plaks. Bialik Institute.
  • Plaks, Andrew (2007)."Leaving the Garden: Reflections on China's Literary Masterwork".New Left Review.47.
  • Cao Xueqin(2018).חלום המשכנות האדומים[Dream of the Red Chamber] (in Hebrew). Vol. 1. Translated by Andrew Plaks; Amira Katz. Bialik Institute.
  • Cao Xueqin (2021).חלום המשכנות האדומים[Dream of the Red Chamber] (in Hebrew). Vol. 2. Translated by Andrew Plaks; Amira Katz. Bialik Institute.

References

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  1. ^ab"Andrew H. Plaks".The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Archived fromthe originalon 2014-12-10.Retrieved2014-12-05.
  2. ^"Obituaries 2/13/13".Town Topics. February 13, 2013.Retrieved2014-12-05.
  3. ^abWidmer, Ellen (1988). "Review".The Journal of Asian Studies.47(4): 869–871.doi:10.2307/2057883.JSTOR2057883.
  4. ^abRopp, Paul S. (1990), "The Distinctive Art of Chinese Fiction", in Ropp, Paul (ed.),The Heritage of China: Contemporary Perspectives,Berkeley: University of California Press, p. 326,ISBN0-520-06441-0
  5. ^Cao, Xueqin (2018).Dream of the Red Chamber.Israel: Bialik Publishing.
  6. ^Pollard, David (1977)."Review".Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies.40(2): 420–421.doi:10.1017/S0041977X00044487.S2CID161979606.
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