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[personal profile] cashew

Chinese period dramas are not nearly enamored enough with the 宋 (Song) dynasty. Most people are overly focused on it being the dynasty that the Mongols successfully invaded, so the narrative is always it was the dynasty that "ended" continuous Han rule (even though the "Han" majority has always been a huge mixture of immigrants since the existence of 汉 as a concept). But people never seem to remember that 宋 delivered so many cool things and is actually one of the most progressive dynasties, even probably more so than the often touted 唐 (Tang) dynasty. (Don't get me wrong, 唐 delivered some very major reform and policy changes, but for the most part it was still mostly in the experimental phase. 宋 refined everything from 唐 and really pushed through some hugely influential things.) So, here are some major contributions of 宋 dynasty:

  • Only dynasty in Chinese history where women were more valued culturally than men. Although patriarchy was still the governing norm, women across the board had much higher social status and gained privileges that were not available during other dynasties, including: earned higher average wages than men; could initiate divorce papers; had legal fiscal control of her dowry; held official positions in the government with corresponding pay; participated in the imperial exam; attended school with men; empresses took over decision making when the emperor was indisposed as a norm; etc.

  • The font 宋体 was developed and used as the default for printing to this day. It is also the default font for Chinese in digital format.

  • Printing press, gunpowder, naval compass were all invented during this dynasty.

  • Paper money invented and used regularly during this dynasty.

  • Balance of power between the Emperor and Prime Minister. The Prime Minister has the political power to veto the Emperor's decrees.

  • Successfully maintained three functioning branches of government that had oversight over each other. (唐 dynasty had it for a very short period before the central branch consolidated power and cannibalized the other two branches.)

  • Chairs.

  • Steeped tea instead of boiled tea.

  • Stir-fry. So much of "traditional" Chinese dishes came from this dynasty.

  • Black tea. Do you understand how coveted black tea is? England started wars (multiple) for access to this stuff.


Don't get me wrong, I'm very glad dynastic China is in the past, because that system is oppressive AF, even with the reforms. But 宋 dynasty doesn't get enough credit for being one of the more culturally progressive dynasties.

Date: 2024-11-30 08:10 (UTC)
tanithryudo: (Default)
From: [personal profile] tanithryudo
By period drama are you talking about court dramas? Romance dramas?

Because if we're talking wuxia, Song dynasty is definitely not under-represented. From the ancient classics of 水浒传 & 包青天 (and derivatives) to more modern classics like 天龙八部,射雕英雄传,神雕侠侣,四大名捕,逆水寒... It's a great setting for wuxia stories.

If we're talking about palace/romance dramas, that's maybe to blame on the emperors. The Song emperors just didn't have a messy court life like Han and Tang did. Or have enough infamy/strong characterization to them like the Ming and Qing emperors did.

> Stir-fry. So much of "traditional" Chinese dishes came from this dynasty.

To add, if we're talking about gourmet food based stories, then yeah, those tend to take place during the Ming or Qing dynasty, for the simple reason that a lot of familiar dishes and ingredients that the writers and readers are familiar with came from the Americas. People just aren't interested in food stories that don't have chili peppers, potatoes, or corn.
Edited Date: 2024-11-30 08:15 (UTC)

Date: 2024-11-30 17:31 (UTC)
tanithryudo: (Default)
From: [personal profile] tanithryudo
I remember 杨家将 had a TV dramas way back when. And you can't say that 水浒传 at least didn't depict the lives of the era. That said, I'll give you that wuxia in general don't tend to get into the slice of life details that other dramas do.

I can understand why a large amount of stories get set in Ming and Qing era. Those are closest to the present, and there's much more information out there on the history (both real and fake), and there's probably a lot more elements that are similar to modern day and easier to relate to.

Tang... hm, the only reason I can think of why it would be more popular than Song from a TV drama perspective is the low cut of women's clothing. :p That and if we're talking dramas that involve the Imperial court in any way, Tang definitely has the more..."interesting" royal family politics out there.

Song I feel like is overshadowed by the whole...mess that ended the North Song and started the south Song (we did get 满江红 movie out of that recently, btw). But not everyone wants to write/read tragedy.

> the famous 江浙 cuisine

Eh, but nobody wants to write that though. If you skim through any 美食 related story, it will inevitably involve spicy chili hot pot, introducing potatoes/corn ahead of history, etc.
Edited Date: 2024-11-30 17:34 (UTC)

Date: 2024-12-02 07:50 (UTC)
tanithryudo: (Default)
From: [personal profile] tanithryudo
> North Song dynasty also had pretty low cut clothes on women's clothes, historically.

Lower than Tang? I've always thought it was due to the higher temperatures during the Tang period which probably caused the sexier dress, and Song dynasty (and Ming) happened during colder eras.

But the yeah, agreed on the Japan/anime influence from Tang probably being an element of its popularity.

> Tang also had two separate sections historically and it also ended on a sour note.

Eh, but like nobody talks about those parts because it's messy and there's no representative work (fantastical or historical) to create an impression in the public consciousness. I feel like for most people, their impression of the period goes: 李世民 -> 武则天 -> 杨贵妃/安史之乱 -> 宋. 五代十国 just doesn't have an equivalent to 三国演义 or 琅琊榜 to advertise for it.

> So like...there's definitely weird nationalist politics involved.

Hm... that's another possibility. I haven't looked into it for 宋(辽金西夏蒙古), but I know from reading novels on Tang that often I would see "突厥" get auto-censored by the website. Dunno if 匈奴 get the same treatment for Han era, but I vaguely recall reading somewhere that TV shows for Han had to steer carefully around using the term. And I have seen author notes complaining about how they can't write in too much detail about Qing period because of ethnic politics.

> Early Song, much like early Tang was actually mostly un-tragic.

杨家将 is early Song and a tragedy...that's the one I'm most familiar with for that era. It doesn't matter if the actual history is non-tragic, the stories related to Song tend to be tragic (especially the kind where you have loyal ministers framed and cast out of service... doesn't help when you have glaring examples like 岳飞, 辛弃疾, 苏轼, 狄青, etc.)

> So there's this weird bias against South Chinese culture...which is weird

Feels like that's always been there. Perhaps because most of the time, the political "winners" are northerners? Like, the South is the direction the government flees when it gets beat up (衣冠南渡,南宋,南明,Taiwan).

So, I feel like the stereotype of the south is that it's the place of literary arts and pretty women... but also equating to soft, weak, indolent, etc.

Date: 2024-12-03 01:56 (UTC)
tanithryudo: (Default)
From: [personal profile] tanithryudo
> Compare that to Song era fashion historical reproduction

Image is not loading for me.

> The cold spell didn't hit until the Ming dynasty.

I thought the temperature spike during Tang was pretty much paralleled and supported the rise and fall of 吐蕃.

> The fact 宋 and 五代十国 gets mushed together makes me sad.

I think 五代十国 just gets skipped in the popular consciousness rather than mushed into Song. I mean, over a hundred years of late Tang also got skipped.

> 杨家将 is entirely fictional.

I know, but the story is typically set in early Song. Similarly like stories of other Song figures are typically framed as tragedies or at least, not happy endings. It doesn't really matter what the actual history is like, since we're talking impression in popular consciousness.

> I mean, 明 was literally a case of successful south fighting back to the north example.

Eh, 朱元璋 sure. But then after his death, 朱棣 kind of reconquered the country, and his base of operations was 北京, hence moving the capital, killing lotsa southern intelligentsia that supported 建文, and starting the edit wars on 明史.

> Basically there's biases against both directions.

Oh, there's biases in every direction if you look for it. Even in official histories, there's probably conflicts between different eras looking back on previous dynasties. In modern fiction, I guess it would really depend on the writer (or screenwriter/production investor/etc.)

Date: 2024-12-03 04:49 (UTC)
tanithryudo: (Default)
From: [personal profile] tanithryudo
> Kind of like how 秦 has been cursed out for 2000+ years while 汉 got all the credit

If you're talking historically, it's cuz Han lasted longer and wrote the actual history books (史记,汉书), while Qin didn't have much records that survived.

But if we're talking about modern perspectives, I don't actually recall all that many famous/representative stories of Han either. I mean, unless you want to count half of ROTK I guess. The most often modernly depicted Han stories tend to be 汉武帝, and honestly, that guy didn't have a much better rep than 秦始皇...

Though, I think that in the more recent time period, the modern rep of Qin has been improving with the discoveries of the Qin scrolls, shows like 秦时明月, etc. Going by online novels, most modern authors actually root for 秦始皇 than for any of the Han emperors.

(Note: Personally, I think the crazy fangirls of Qin have gone a too far in the other direction. Yes, Qin had a lot of influence on history. But so did Han.)

> I'm bemoaning that in modern mass media, the anti-south bias is more represented than the anti-north bias.

Well, anti-north bias can easily get mixed into ethnic politics I guess. While anti-south bias is...politically safer, maybe?

> Hell, even 秦 got that one movie that tried to reform the public image of 秦始皇.

Hahah... I guess if we're talking about shows centered around specific emperors (like 康熙王朝, 汉武大帝, etc.), I wonder if the problem is Song just lacks emperors whose lives are interesting enough to romanticize... while not becoming the villain. Like, 宋太祖 has a promising career story, but it ends too abruptly (and mysteriously) to have closure. 宋仁宗 is too overshadowed by his court. 英宗 & 哲宗 had short reigns/life. Can't really think of anyone else who would make for a good story.
Edited Date: 2024-12-03 04:58 (UTC)

Date: 2024-12-03 08:51 (UTC)
tanithryudo: (Default)
From: [personal profile] tanithryudo
> Have any of them managed to make the jump to TV yet? Am curious.

I don't think so. This trend comes up more in stories that feature multiple emperors/dynasties, where comparisons inevitably come up. (And as mentioned with the crazy fangirls, there's a lot of 拉踩 that goes on.) These type of stories don't transition well to TV/movie.

> The likes of 范仲淹、寇准、欧阳修、晏殊、苏轼 etc. all lived pretty epic lives worthy of politicking court dramas, but period dramas tend to ignore them.

My guess is that the politics involved (which is mostly related to complex policy, economics, diplomacy) is too complicated for screenwriters to handle. Or for production to expect audiences to handle well enough to make it worth their while to produce.

In comparison, succession crisis drama or romance drama is easier to write and more reliable with regards to audience response.

> from 太祖 to 太宗 to 真宗 to 仁宗 was really complicated and interesting

But who gets to be the main protagonist / "good guy"? I mean, interesting from historical reading doesn't necessarily translate well into sales pitch or screenplay.

As for 刘娥, I simply don't think she has the same kind of name recognition as 武则天 (or even 吕后), which makes it less likely for productions to consider her.

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