Theme classification of The Book of Songs and its theme significance, representative works and main ideas?

1. Classification: Feng, Ya and Ode.

Second, the theme significance:

1. The Wind: a folk song from all over the country.

2. Elegance: a poem dedicated to the nobility, praying for a good year and praising the ancestors.

3. "Ode:" a poem of sacrifice in the ancestral temple.

Third, representative works:

1. The Wind: Guan Ju and Tao Yao, Wei Fengzhong's Cutting Tan and Shuoshu, and Qin Feng's Jia Jia.

2. Elegance: King of Literature, Juan A and Min Lao, and Xiaoya has Luming Literature, Picking Wei and Sigan.

3. Ode: Qing Temple, Wei Tian's Destiny and Xi Xi.

Theme:

1. The Wind: It sings about beautiful things such as love and labor, and there are also complaints and anger about homesickness, thinking about people, and anti-oppression and anti-bullying.

2. Ya: Dissatisfied with the real politics, besides banquet songs, sacrificial songs and epics, she also wrote some satirical poems reflecting people's wishes.

3. Ode: It is of great value for investigating early history, religion and society.

Extended information:

1. The Book of Songs, the earliest collection of poems, is the beginning of China's ancient poems. It collected 311 poems from the early years of the Western Zhou Dynasty to the middle of the Spring and Autumn Period (from the 11th century to the 6th century before), of which 6 were Sheng poems, that is, there were only titles but no contents, which were called Six Sheng Poems (".

2. The folk value of The Book of Songs is also obvious, including love, marriage and sacrifice. For example, "Gao Feng Jing Nv" wrote about the mutual love of aristocratic young men and women; "The Final Wind" is a ballad in which men and women flirt. Zheng Feng Out of the East Gate reflects men's single-mindedness for love.

3. These poems, which reflect various marital situations from different sides and angles, comprehensively reflect the folk customs in various places in the Spring and Autumn Period of the Western Zhou Dynasty, and are good materials for understanding the ancient marriage history of China, from which we can also learn the different attitudes and views of ancient men and women towards marriage.