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:''This is a page on media regarding Yue Fei. To read his main article, please see Yue Fei.'' Yue Fei, a Chinese general of the Song Dynasty remembered for his exploits in the Jin–Song wars, has appeared in various types of media; including black-and-white films, plays, games, wuxia novels, and folktales. ==Literature== *''Xiyoubu'' (西遊補; ''Supplement to Journey to the West'', 1640), a Ming Dynasty addendum to the classical novel ''Journey to the West'', which takes place between the end of chapter 61 and the beginning of 62. In the novel, the Monkey King faces a representation of his own carnal desires and is trapped inside of a tower full of mirrors, each with its own powers. One mirror causes him to travel forward in time from the Tang to the Song Dynasty. There, some junior devils appear and tell him that the ruler of the underworld King Yama has recently died of an illness and so Monkey must take his place until a suitable replacement can be found. Monkey ends up judging the fate of the recently deceased Prime Minister Qin Hui. He tortures Qin into confessing his sins. These tortures include having millions of embroidery needles shoved into his flesh, being ground into paste, thrown onto a mountain of swords and spears, hacked into bits, forced to drink human puss, and his rib cage ripped apart to give him the appearance of a dragonfly. A demon is charged with using his magic breath to "blow" Qin back into his proper form. Monkey finally sends a demon to heaven to retrieve a powerful magic gourd that sucks anyone who speaks before it inside and melts them down into a bloody stew. He uses this gourd for Qin's final punishment. Meanwhile, Monkey invites the ghost of Yue Fei to the underworld and takes him as his third master. (He claims this completes his lessons on the three religions since: 1) the immortal Subhodhi taught him Taoist magic; 2) the Tang Sanzang taught him Buddhist restraint; 3) Yue Fei taught him Confucian ideals.) He entertains Yue Fei until Qin Hui has been reduced to liquid and offers the general a cup of Qin's "blood wine". Yue, however, refuses on the grounds that drinking it would sully his soul. Monkey then does an experiment where he makes a junior devil drink of the wine. Sometime later, the devil, apparently under the evil influence of the blood wine, murders his personal religious teacher and escapes into the "gate of ghosts," presumably being reborn into another existence. Yue Fei then takes his leave to return to his heavenly abode. Monkey sends him off with a huge display of respect by making all of the millions of denizens of the underworld kowtow before him.〔Dong, Yue, Shuen-fu Lin, Larry James Schulz, and Chengẻn Wu. ''The Tower of Myriad Mirrors: A Supplement to Journey to the West''. Michigan classics in Chinese studies, 1. Ann Arbor: Center for Chinese Studies, The University of Michigan, 2000.〕 *''China's Top Ten Classical Tragedy'' (中國十大古典悲劇), including a vignette of Yue Fei's grandson's quest to clear his late-grandfather's name. *''Shuo Yue Quanzhuan'' (說岳全傳; "The Story of Yue Fei", literally ''Telling the Complete Biography of Yue Fei''), a novel based on Yue Fei's biography, with elements of wuxia fiction. It was written by Qian Cai (钱彩), who lived some time during the reigns of the Kangxi and Yongzheng emperors (1661-1735) of the Qing Dynasty.〔Qian, Cai. ''General Yue Fei''. Trans. Honorable Sir T.L. Yang. Joint Publishing (H.K.) Co., Ltd. (1995) ISBN 978-962-04-1279-0〕 It in *''Yue Fei Zhuan'' (岳飛傳; ''The Biography of Yue Fei''), by wuxia writer Huanzhu Louzhu (還珠樓主)〔(Huan Zhu Lou Zhu )〕〔 (岳飞传 )〕 This should not be confused with the historical biography of Yue Fei written during the Song Dynasty, but compiled with other such biographies in the Yuan Dynasty. *''Condor Trilogy'' (射鵰三部曲), a trilogy of novels by wuxia writer Louis Cha. Although Yue Fei does not appear in the stories, he is still revered by many of the characters as an ethnic hero.〔(Legend of the Condor Heroes – Chapter 1 )〕 Yang Kang, the primary antagonist of ''The Legend of the Condor Heroes'', is a descendant of Yang Zaixing, a subordinate of Yue Fei. The ''Book of Wumu'' (武穆遺書; ''Posthumous Writings of Wumu''〔"Wumu" refers to Yue Fei〕), a fictional military textbook written by Yue Fei, is also featured in the first and third novels. The book is hidden inside the titular Dragon Saber in ''The Heaven Sword and Dragon Saber''. Guo Jing and Xu Da benefit from reading the book and using the military strategies detailed inside to defeat enemy armies. *''Yue Fei Lie Zhuan'' (岳飛列傳), a manhua series about Yue Fei's military exploits.〔(HISTORICAL COMIC BOOKS, STRIPS, ETC. - Yue Fei lie zhuan )〕 *''Tiebi Jindao Zhou Tong Zhuan'' (鐵臂金刀周侗傳; ''Iron Arm, Golden Broadsword: The Biography of Zhou Tong'') - Yue Fei appears as Zhou Tong's student in the last few chapters of Zhou's fictional biography.〔Wang, Yun Heng () and Xiao Yun Long (). ''Tiebi Jindao Zhou Tong Zhuan'' ( - "Iron Arm, Golden Broadsword: The Biography of Zhou Tong"). Hangzhou: Zhejiang People's Publishing House, 1986 (UBSN --- Union Books and Serials Number) CN (10103.414) and 464574〕 *''Zhou Tong Chuanqi'' (周侗傳奇; ''The Legend of Zhou Tong'') - This lianhuanhua-style comic book is based on Zhou Tong's biography and has the same material about Yue Fei, but in picture form.〔Xiong, Ti (). ''Zhou Tong Zhuan Qi'' (周侗傳奇; ''The Legend of Zhou Tong'') (Vol. 1-10). Zhejiang Literature and Art Publishing House (), 1987〕 *''Donald Duk'', a 1991 novel by Frank Chin, includes a version of the story using the Cantonese spelling Ngawk Fay. Chin uses the version of the story in which Yue Fei's mother inscribes the tattoo on his back; Chin also uses the version of the story in which the married couple who betrays him are immortalized as the origin of a Chinese double doughnut, which is fried and cut open as a sign of the people's hatred for the couple's treachery toward him. *''River of Stars'' by Guy Gavriel Kay 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Media about Yue Fei」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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