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This is a list of female poets with a ... 1515–1582), Spanish mystic and Catholic saint; Lucrezia ... Agnes Strickland (1796–1874), English history writer ...
Ming poetry (and Chinese art and literature in general) is marked by 2 transitional phases, the transition between the Yuan dynasty which was the predecessor to the Ming, and the Qing-Ming transition which eventually resulted in the succeeding Qing dynasty. Although in politico-dynastic terms, the dynastic leadership of China is historically ...
Lin Zongsu (1878–1944) women's rights essayist; Ling Shuhua (1900–1990) modernist writer and painter; Lin Xue (Ming Dynasty) landscape painter, poet, calligrapher; Lin Yining (1655-c.1730) one of the original Banana Garden Poets; Liu Qingyun (c.1841-c.1900) playwright; Liu Rushi (1618–1664) singer, poet and writer; Liu Ying (born 1974 ...
Xu Yuan (Chinese: 徐媛; pinyin: Xú Yuàn; Wade–Giles: Hsü Yüan, c. 1560 - 1620 [1]), courtesy name name Xiaoshu(小淑), [2] was a Ming dynasty child prodigy and poet during the reign of the Wanli Emperor (1563–1620). Born in Suzhou to the imperial retainer Xu Shitai, she became regarded as one of the foremost female poets from Suzhou.
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[16] [17] [18] While much of Wang's poetry dealt with the landscape, Tina Lu has argued that nature was only the secondary topic of her work, with the primary focus being a "landscape of nostalgia" that Wang used to express her identity as a traveller. [19] Her poetry appears in the Zhong Xiang Ci, an anthology of late Ming-early Qing female ...
Susana Medina (born 1966), poetry and prose in Spanish and English; Concha Méndez (1898–1986), poet, playwright, member of Generation of '27; Rosa Méndez Fonte (born 1957), Galician poet, writer, and researcher; Ana Merino (born 1971), poet, novelist, educator, living in the United States; Sara Mesa (born 1976), poet and novelist
Xue Tao was the first female innovator in the history of Chinese calligraphy, she is also a female innovator in the history of Chinese papermaking. [12] [13] A contemporary wrote that she took on the garments of a Daoist adept, signaling a relatively autonomous status within Tang society. Hsueh Tʻao, a Venusian crater, is named after her. [14]