Chao Zhang
Zhang Chao (1650-after 1707) was a Ming loyalist-turned-Qing Dynasty literatus, essayist, and compiler, best known for his lyrical masterpiece . Born in Xin'an, Anhui (modern-day She County), into an educated family, Zhang received a classical Confucian education but eschewed official careerism, devoting himself instead to writing and intellectual circles. His magnum opus, You Meng Ying, is a collection of reflective, fragmentary essays written in the qingyan ("clear words") style-blending...See more
Zhang Chao (1650-after 1707) was a Ming loyalist-turned-Qing Dynasty literatus, essayist, and compiler, best known for his lyrical masterpiece . Born in Xin'an, Anhui (modern-day She County), into an educated family, Zhang received a classical Confucian education but eschewed official careerism, devoting himself instead to writing and intellectual circles. His magnum opus, You Meng Ying, is a collection of reflective, fragmentary essays written in the qingyan ("clear words") style-blending Daoist spontaneity, Buddhist detachment, and Confucian humanism with observations on nature, art, and the joys of scholarly solitude. The work's poetic brevity and philosophical depth have drawn comparisons to The Analects and Dream Pool Essays, though Zhang's voice is distinctly personal, oscillating between wit and wistfulness. Today, Zhang Chao is celebrated as a late-Ming sensibility preserved in Qing literature-a voice of quiet rebellion against worldly ambition, finding sublimity in dreams, shadows, and the ephemeral. See less