The Chinese literary type of Chuci 楚辞 "Poetry of Chu" or "Poetry of the South" is a sort of poem that found its origin in the works of Qu Yuan 屈原, a high minister in the state of Chu 楚.

After his death, many persons from that region imitated his style of writing. The formal style and the themes of this poems was so different from the poems of the states in the Yellow River plain that it was always treated as a separate type of literature. The most famous poem is Qu Yuan's Lisao 离骚 "Sorrow after departing". The style of the Chuci and commentaries to these poems have been included as a separate sub-category in the collectaneum Siku quanshu 四库全书. It includes only 6 writings of and on this type of poetry.
A great part of the poems is ascribed to the statesman Qu Yuan. The collection Chuci was compiled by the Han period 汉 (206 BCE-220 CE) scholar Liu Xiang 刘向 and commented by Wang Yi 王逸. The collection comprises poems of Qu Yuan and Song Yu 宋玉, both ministers at the court of the king of Chu, and the Han period scholars Jia Yi 贾谊, Huainan Xiaoshan 淮南小山, Dongfang Shuo 东方朔, Zhuang Ji 庄忌, Wang Bao 王褒, Liu Xiang and Wang Yi. All of them came from the same region in modern central China which had a cultural tradition distinct from the states in the Yellow River plain.
Qu Yuan was a high minister of King Huai of Chu 楚怀王 (r. 328-299) to whom he suggested reforms in government and an alliance with the state of Qi 齐 in order to encounter the growing power of the state of Qin 秦. Qu Yuan was slendered by another minister called Qin Shang 靳尚 and thereupon dismissed. When King Qingxiang 楚顷襄王 (r. 298-263) was taken prisoner by Qin, Qu Yuan wrote his famous poem Li Sao 离骚 "Sorrow after department" which can be interpreted as a kind of autobiography. The disappointed Qu Yuan drowned himself in the River Miluo 汨罗江. People later started offering rice balls to his soul, and during the mid-autumn moon festival (zhongqiujie 中秋节), rice balls enveloped in bamboo leaves (zongzi 粽子) are still a popular meal in southern China.
Other poems that are ascribed to Qu Yuan are the Nine Songs (Jiuge 九歌), the Nine Elegies (Jiuzhang 九章), "Asking Heaven" (Wentian 问天) and some more. The particular style of the Chuci poetry differs from the northern poetry styles both in verse (the verse divider xi 兮, a particle expressing sighing) and in content. The northern literature is much more plain of feelings, while the poems in the southern state of Chu are full of sentiment and even mystical visions. Qu Yuan, for example, is guided on his horse chart to a heaven far from the human world. His evokings of the Goddess of the River Xiang 湘君 is an example of shamanism common in the southern religion. Southern poetry later became very popular among Daoists that also saw man as a mere small being in cosm and nature.
The Chuci collection was enlarged by some other poems that were partially also written by "southerners", partially imitations of Qu Yuan's style, like the Han period poet Wang Bao from the region of Sichuan, and Liu Xiang, son of Liu Jiao 刘交 (posthumous title Prince Yuan of Chu 楚元王), or Jia Yi and Dongfang Shuo, both writers known for their inclination to Daoism.

In the bibliography Yiwen zhi 艺文志, part of the official dynastic history Hanshu 汉书, the poems of Qu Yuan are listed as fu 赋 "rhapsodies" in 25 chapters. The bibliography treatise Jingjizhi 经籍志 in the Suishu 隋书 already lists ten books about the Chuci, of which the greatest part is lost today.

In the bibliography Yiwen zhi 藝文志, part of the official dynastic history Hanshu 漢書, the poems of Qu Yuan are listed as fu 賦 "rhapsodies" in 25 chapters. The bibliography treatise Jingjizhi 經籍志 in the Suishu 隋書 already lists ten books about the Chuci, of which the greatest part is lost today.