Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - What is Fu Bixing's technique?

What is Fu Bixing's technique?

Fu Bixing refers to three main expressive techniques in The Book of Songs. It is a summary of the expression methods of China's ancient poems. It is based on the creative experience of The Book of Songs.

Fu Bixing explained in detail:

Fu is a straightforward expression of people's thoughts and feelings and related things. "The Farmer" was a hit in July, and sending clothes in September was a straightforward way.

Comparison is analogy, which is somewhat similar to metaphor, but not exactly the same as metaphor. In "Singing Crane", "stones from other mountains can attack jade" is used as a metaphor for a saint ruling the country, while "Shuo Ren" is used as a metaphor for a beautiful woman's hand with soft words.

Xing, is to say something else first, and then say this thing. In Peacock Flying Southeast, there are peacocks flying southeast and wandering for five miles, which means peacocks come first, which leads to the hero Liu Lanzhi's reluctance to part with his family and husband Jiao Zhongqing.

Brief introduction of The Book of Songs;

The Book of Songs is the earliest collection of poems and the beginning of China's ancient poems. Collected poems from the early years of the Western Zhou Dynasty to the middle of the Spring and Autumn Period (pre-1 1 century to the 6th century), with a total of * * * 31/,among which 6 poems are full, that is, there are only titles but no contents, which is called full poems.

The Book of Songs is rich in content, reflecting labor and love, war and corvee, oppression and resistance, customs and marriage, ancestor worship and feasting, and even astronomical phenomena, landforms, animals and plants. It is a mirror of the social life of the Zhou Dynasty.