@article{oai:kumadai.repo.nii.ac.jp:00023657, author = {Peng, Lamei and 彭, 腊梅}, journal = {熊本大学社会文化研究}, month = {Mar}, note = {application/pdf, 論文(Article), Su was a hetaira of Southern Qi Dynasty in China's legend. There is no historical document about her left except a poem titled Qiantangao's Suxiao song, which belongs to New Odes from the Jade Terrace, a poem anthology of Six Dynasties. Many poems meentioned her from the beginning of middle of Tang Dynasty. Such a situation did not change in Song Dynasty. In Ming-Qing Dynasty, literators wrote operas and legend novels with her as the heroin. Until now, her tomb is still preserved on the shore of the West Lake in Hangzhou of China. Why are literators so enamoured of her? What is the meaning of Suxiaoxiao's existence in China's literature history? This paper will focus on Suxiaoxiao's image in Qiantangao's Suxiao song and the transition of her image in the Tang poem. This paper will reveal the changing relationship between the literators of Tang Dynasty and prostitutes, the Suxiaoxiao's literature meaning, and its value in Tang Dynasty.}, pages = {255--271}, title = {蘇小小像の変遷 : 六朝詩から唐詩まで}, volume = {8}, year = {2010} }