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One dressed as a peasant woman, and also a famous dashing village woman; He had no money and no food. His family was in ruins, and he had even sold his husband to repay the debt? She picked up her disreputable reputation bit by bit, planted the herbs, opened the shop, rolled up her sleeves and made a living; He had only wanted to live an ordinary life, but now he met a noble and refined medical saint, a dark and cold general, and a handsome young master in white clothes ... Waving his sleeves, he caused green leaves to roll behind him. This was a story of a female lead who had started from scratch and ended up accidentally becoming the richest man in Jiangnan ~ ~ The ending was 1V1.
Spanning antiquity until the present, Zhao Lu analyses the eclectic and fictitious representations of Confucius that have been widely celebrated by communities of people throughout history. While mainstream scholarship mostly considers Confucius in terms of his role as a celebrated man of wisdom and as a teacher with a humanistic worldview, Zhao addresses the weirder representations. He considers depictions of Confucius as a prophet, a fortune-teller, a powerful demon hunter, a shrewd villain of 19th century American newspapers, an embodiment of feudal evils in the Cultural Revolution, and as a cute friend. Zhao asks why some groups would risk contradicting the well-accepted image of Confucius with such representations and shows how these illustrations reflect the specific anxieties of these communities. He reveals not only how people across history perceived Confucius in diverse ways, but more importantly how they used Confucius in daily life, ranging from calming their anxiety about the future, to legitimizing a dynasty, stereotyping Chinese people, and even to forging a new sense of history.
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