Albuquerque Weekly Citizen, 06-23-1894 T

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Albuquerque Weekly Citizen, 06-23-1894 T University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository Albuquerque Citizen, 1891-1906 New Mexico Historical Newspapers 6-23-1894 Albuquerque Weekly Citizen, 06-23-1894 T. Hughes Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/abq_citizen_news Recommended Citation Hughes, T.. "Albuquerque Weekly Citizen, 06-23-1894." (1894). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/abq_citizen_news/117 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the New Mexico Historical Newspapers at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Albuquerque Citizen, 1891-1906 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. w (arrow VOLUME ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO, SATU DAY, JUNE 23, 1894. NUMBER 33. hort sjtench by Pefler, waa placed on the ' FOR PRESIDENT! and navy buildings at Wash calendar. The nton. 20,000,000.' tak-a- tariff bill was taken up, HILL IS HOT! The trip to Holland Is n "Last fliiminer Jaekfton was lllliat.il BOYCOTT FAVORED ! the pending question law-ye- Win the paragraph upon thn advice of thn New York rs with men known to be of placing Mil on tha free 111. A motion by ai.rchUile who have been at work leaning In this city It um the Pefler waa rejected, an salt remains will b remem- - case for some years free wired and believe that Harrison Getting Ready for the "All In that them wnn to lm a world's sugars" aa read the amendment .He Denounces the Rotten Re Cspt. Jack will be able lo obtain in flcot-lan- d congress of anarcliisla In thin city during American Railway Union of thn finance nominltten, oh a motion to Against thn missing links of evidence neces- Presidential Campaign, the World's fair, ami that though there trtke It out being maila, Aldrich demand cord of Democratic Party. sary lo perfect his own title and that were no public meetings, them was Pullman Palace Gars. of ad a vote ami the result waa the a so. his immediate relatives on his para crot session In Jacksvn'a mother's grapu waa struck out. oftice. The ik. side to the lamn estate. a at a . Ilea found no occasion for Interfering iloblwrs Attempt to Steal the Aliens amendment....looking to free Tho Strike Causes IncrcHeof with the meeting and nothing waadnne," Uatlaa; ! Itenvrr. Cherokee Cash Box. lumlier waa adopted. The senate Tho Senate Passes Two Bills then Anthracite Out ji waenington, June 22. Henator Dulatis finished the free llat part of tit. Mate la anil DiscnBscs bill. riMiMlis, the Tariff. and I vn Hweel. of Idahi HarrUhurg. June 'Jl Paltl-ao- n Governor leave for Denver Wimaa 4 to-da- to attend the Weat Ylrglala Whim Hang hratrare A at nooit y received a dispatch laps New Vork, June 30. In tha court of Crooked NanMcbanrtts Bank Teller Congressman Kepuhllrah Nutional Isgtm convention Tbrte Horse Tbi from Hherlff Onurley, saying tho filiation Punatoa Cn sea ted by the fri. oyer and Terminer tbla morning Justice Amite. They will lie found enthilaiaatic chain. at Walnlon Is the same and the la Democratic Majority In the llop.se. ingrsuata aentenced Krastue Wlman.con mob ...I .i .... Blood Poison atlll in Mieession, and mil- rlctod of forger In the aecond repiesting the I largely at the of KHA8TUH WIMAN BKNTKMCKD. degree, to itary. Thn governor reject Senator Teller. THE SANE OF HVMM LtfE, nva yeara CIBCCB BLOWN AWAY. ordered trooa to MA8HINH or ( olonulo, Is ami a naif imprisonment In tba the spot at TIIOOIU A'lAlNBT MOD. who unable to leave. penitentiary once. Drlvon Out of Syrtem by Hrll' untlawo Washington, June 20. 'After receiving the sentence, resneet Tae O I W t. theUMot of Ill , June 22,-- The advance folly but unmoved, Washington, Junn 21. After unimport- Ban Francisco, June HI The .' V Chicago, June 22. A siteclal ctmmlt. Ilia Treasury, Cbsrlrs Poster, la to hsvn General Tracy aaked I 0 guard oi the Kelly army ant routine business bill W tec of thn American Union reachel here at charge "f Omcnd permission to apply for a tha tariff waa adjournn t. meet at Atlanta m June, Itallway 1 Ayer's Harrison's interests In certificate n'click and proeeMlnl direct to Lake-vie- Sarsaparilla taken up this morning, the - 1HV.1. Hirteil to the convention thla morning in the racn for the next republican preaklen reasonable doubt. Thla waa ir ranted tending ipiea- It was decided that a uieiiil-!- ' Uon pary, where they am camje. Wiman will not m HI being the Income tax. Hllladdresced atamling should not In favor of declaring a boycott on the Pull 'for flyo ycam, I wnn m Ma nomination, occupying towards thn taken to Hlmr imperiled by fail The army cotiolats I.VJ a pre the senate In opjtoslUon. man cars, of men and two jtHTerer from ii most ttlit uiiiii una mailer la urn to par asaeaimenta levleil for II. h and debate followed. If a ! ami campaign precisely twilled. Tha sentence wagon loads of iUiilw, blood tllavasc, tioni' of tho varlotm with uu. wu in nrotesl benefit of rot.,1. ,ul n... i .... boycott is declared the memlwrs of the 1 S the toeltlon occupied liy John C. Nnw, of commutation off, will amount to iiarii "i i. - inv4 ...mi. in, i uiihIIcIiick took Ix'ltig any thm .. .. .. mi -- of 3 mm..1iI.. i .t..un l union will refuse to move trains to which help Indianatois, during the 12 iniinlha nr threii yeara ami eleven months. uemiwraiM Mriy eociary, relief....and genei-a- IiiikIh ami tlut ill Abaent. wlmtnver. lloplna tint ? in nrd-- r to carry promises - . Pullman cars Washington. June 22. CHilllKn Ol WOlllll mora tn thn Minurut inotiater iwtition for pardon la belnir - out to nonu- ni iusitnmle4l lir a1IIWHtlssl ttlMtllf asst. xian u. am attached. This will ef bleaker Crisp I'llllllltP iK'tll'llt iror Kli convention cir- is atlll rut', I went to Cuba, lo Florida, t'tllatiMl. iiM iDOoroe Ua U war Ui. It la unr&tlr Uktin lurk Int. ii.M , ....t toct a majority of the western road a In absent ami Ilalley. of Teiaa, la h in ! j. iiiii ininruistion onmea from a he lie and then to tiiirutogti Springs, to tboaa desiring to support the tariff bill forty-flv- e the east the union ia not milhVlently the chair KaVornhle rejiortH on bills to 1 prominent Ohio republican who has m undur years ofse. liow when? remained twimi time ComiiroMl r adraaard. to be obliged to accept a provision for nrful to enforce the Ik.vcoU. The Pull Increase thn (teiiaions of Mexican and In- - drinking thn uatem. Hut all wnn i cenlly returned from tartlclpating in thn loiumiiue, U Junn 'JO. The commit eign to rulvernlo fatramaa. man othVlala to I r no uw. At liiMt. Itelng ndvbed tba principal subject matter of the 1 ,,, . refuse hear iiroiHtsals of veerans were made Sinaraaaaaal i ..... i . a . state convention L'ohimliua, who T T r. I . m,. I I . lie - at and tee on rex. lotion of the miners' conven mi.m.wu. uun uti iieieirnioa lowie ami . I "i in irieiiu.n in ir.V AVet'M OH bill." Continuing hia denunciation Hill arbitration . ... lllllu , ".- I Ul-ui- learned considerable concerning the plans tion to international f.l Sursapnrilla, i tnklnif It. 9 day miMtrted coudumuiair the na University Kitetmlon eon I lHalraMa.., flr aid: "I repudiate spurious democracy me inreai or a ihivcoii. ir irHm u..t i. -- n.. and very soon favorablt- - of gresa , :,. .. 7 " " one jj. nre tir or- - risttltn fj General Harrison's sdhemuts, ami unkuown 'lo-on- the llonal ollitern for making the late were Hntertalneil to doy by tin wem font, y settle. aa part mugwump, port populist and a no, maim sjHiuy all ll.e rallroada of Igin"'".oestr.tye.1 mnii I run-- a statement la a ray of II.'lit to iii-- nt, chancellor almost the entire city of idor J a number of declaring they were not delegated and faculty of thn University III. fMillnta. twill ,lualUI myself a perfectly healthy least part democratic, who aeek to lead la It is alasI It .a. in I mill I... I I . remitt Kir T. rCrili.lli h tnom In.f t n. wan. w a cikhI republican branches of congress vn uj III ofOxford. The enngreoa fomially n wr in nj.petlte and l ciinveiuion ia&e ua astray " He denied that public senti- oten ed that starvation threatens the Pullman far up in the not tho least traee or my former Si who could not undcretsml thn eX'Seem-Ury'- a action einloreed In the of thousauda. by President Adams. ment wae favorable to an income tax, and theatre the Umdon strikers, The retort on the Imycott waa complaint. To all my friends, U sudden call from Poatorla at thn Only one the five Univemlty. and the aon young of committeemen refua. said that no emergency JustiHes It. Martinis of Halinbury diKcithml four hours and then the con Arrhblakap Tarhe lral rniieriniiy men llku ela until hour to assume thu termauent ed to sijfti Winning. the itjkii t. In another rraolu it took Hill two houra and three - win deliver the oteuiiig wldresa. vnniion appointed a committee to Manitoba. June 22. Arch- - chairmanship llm iiuar- confer "a)!ftr,1"a lf f lierfertly of stale convention It tion the bishoji Tachn sillfered a bliMnl-pnrllle- convention rejected the comjiro-- tera to read bis speech. Hlgglns followed, 1 t with the Pullman ollli inls, with vinw relaiisn diirimr rollablti may now I rarte mirrm.
Recommended publications
  • Imagining a Universal Empire: a Study of the Illustrations of the Tributary States of the Myriad Regions Attributed to Li Gonglin
    Journal of chinese humanities 5 (2019) 124-148 brill.com/joch Imagining a Universal Empire: a Study of the Illustrations of the Tributary States of the Myriad Regions Attributed to Li Gonglin Ge Zhaoguang 葛兆光 Professor of History, Fudan University, China [email protected] Abstract This article is not concerned with the history of aesthetics but, rather, is an exercise in intellectual history. “Illustrations of Tributary States” [Zhigong tu 職貢圖] as a type of art reveals a Chinese tradition of artistic representations of foreign emissaries paying tribute at the imperial court. This tradition is usually seen as going back to the “Illustrations of Tributary States,” painted by Emperor Yuan in the Liang dynasty 梁元帝 [r. 552-554] in the first half of the sixth century. This series of paintings not only had a lasting influence on aesthetic history but also gave rise to a highly distinctive intellectual tradition in the development of Chinese thought: images of foreign emis- saries were used to convey the Celestial Empire’s sense of pride and self-confidence, with representations of strange customs from foreign countries serving as a foil for the image of China as a radiant universal empire at the center of the world. The tra- dition of “Illustrations of Tributary States” was still very much alive during the time of the Song dynasty [960-1279], when China had to compete with equally powerful neighboring states, the empire’s territory had been significantly diminished, and the Chinese population had become ethnically more homogeneous. In this article, the “Illustrations of the Tributary States of the Myriad Regions” [Wanfang zhigong tu 萬方職貢圖] attributed to Li Gonglin 李公麟 [ca.
    [Show full text]
  • Archaeological Observation on the Exploration of Chu Capitals
    Archaeological Observation on the Exploration of Chu Capitals Wang Hongxing Key words: Chu Capitals Danyang Ying Chenying Shouying According to accurate historical documents, the capi- In view of the recent research on the civilization pro- tals of Chu State include Danyang 丹阳 of the early stage, cess of the middle reach of Yangtze River, we may infer Ying 郢 of the middle stage and Chenying 陈郢 and that Danyang ought to be a central settlement among a Shouying 寿郢 of the late stage. Archaeologically group of settlements not far away from Jingshan 荆山 speaking, Chenying and Shouying are traceable while with rice as the main crop. No matter whether there are the locations of Danyang and Yingdu 郢都 are still any remains of fosses around the central settlement, its oblivious and scholars differ on this issue. Since Chu area must be larger than ordinary sites and be of higher capitals are the political, economical and cultural cen- scale and have public amenities such as large buildings ters of Chu State, the research on Chu capitals directly or altars. The site ought to have definite functional sec- affects further study of Chu culture. tions and the cemetery ought to be divided into that of Based on previous research, I intend to summarize the aristocracy and the plebeians. The relevant docu- the exploration of Danyang, Yingdu and Shouying in ments and the unearthed inscriptions on tortoise shells recent years, review the insufficiency of the former re- from Zhouyuan 周原 saying “the viscount of Chu search and current methods and advance some personal (actually the ruler of Chu) came to inform” indicate that opinion on the locations of Chu capitals and later explo- Zhou had frequent contact and exchange with Chu.
    [Show full text]
  • Originally, the Descendants of Hua Xia Were Not the Descendants of Yan Huang
    E-Leader Brno 2019 Originally, the Descendants of Hua Xia were not the Descendants of Yan Huang Soleilmavis Liu, Activist Peacepink, Yantai, Shandong, China Many Chinese people claimed that they are descendants of Yan Huang, while claiming that they are descendants of Hua Xia. (Yan refers to Yan Di, Huang refers to Huang Di and Xia refers to the Xia Dynasty). Are these true or false? We will find out from Shanhaijing ’s records and modern archaeological discoveries. Abstract Shanhaijing (Classic of Mountains and Seas ) records many ancient groups of people in Neolithic China. The five biggest were: Yan Di, Huang Di, Zhuan Xu, Di Jun and Shao Hao. These were not only the names of groups, but also the names of individuals, who were regarded by many groups as common male ancestors. These groups first lived in the Pamirs Plateau, soon gathered in the north of the Tibetan Plateau and west of the Qinghai Lake and learned from each other advanced sciences and technologies, later spread out to other places of China and built their unique ancient cultures during the Neolithic Age. The Yan Di’s offspring spread out to the west of the Taklamakan Desert;The Huang Di’s offspring spread out to the north of the Chishui River, Tianshan Mountains and further northern and northeastern areas;The Di Jun’s and Shao Hao’s offspring spread out to the middle and lower reaches of the Yellow River, where the Di Jun’s offspring lived in the west of the Shao Hao’s territories, which were near the sea or in the Shandong Peninsula.Modern archaeological discoveries have revealed the authenticity of Shanhaijing ’s records.
    [Show full text]
  • Five Phases Belief in Chu 楚: Sacrificing White Dogs to Save The
    Name: Xueying Kong Department: East Asian Languages and Literatures 30th Hayes Graduate Research Forum (February, 2016) Five Phases Belief in Chu 楚: Sacrificing White Dogs to Save the Kingdom? Abstract: This paper is a corpus-based study on excavated bamboo-slip inscriptions from Chu state around 700 BCE. -300 BCE. It examines in detail a particular sacrifice made of white dogs and the historical and religious contexts for this ritual. The results show that this occult practice was performed as part of the five-god ritual system of Chu state. In the ritual Chu people singled out white dogs as appropriate sacrifice because in their belief, the energy flow from white dogs were able to destroy Chu state. The whole idea was based on the Five Phases theory, which served as a logical foundation for many cultural practices and social custom in early China. Key words: White dog sacrifice, five phases theory, Chu Bamboo-slip Inscriptions, five-god ritual system Introduction “Offering on the road a white dog, wine, and food as sacrifice,” reads a bamboo strip from Chu state (770BCE.-223 BCE.) in ancient China. 1 The same sentence or sentence structure with a dog (usually white) in it, recurs frequently in other bamboo slips from this time. For example, on bamboo slip No. 229 from Bao-shan Mountain, it reads: “making a sacrifice with a white dog, wine, and food” (Figure 2). Bamboo slip No. 233 says: “making sacrifice with a white dog, wine and food, killing the white dog at the main gate” (Figure 3). Bamboo-slip inscriptions (hereafter BSI) are one of the earliest types of written Chinese.2 From the beginning of 20th century, BSI have been unearthed from multiple ancient tombs, creating successive archeological sensations in China.
    [Show full text]
  • Report Name: Associate Awards From: 1 May 2018 To: 31 May 2018
    Report Name: Associate Awards From: 1 May 2018 To: 31 May 2018 Stefan Marks Extraordinary Achievement GORDON EXECUTIVE OFFICE David Toms Fifty Years of Service LAKENHEATH EXP/GAS Paul Lucas Forty-Five years of Service KIRTLAND EXECUTIVE OFF Johzen Pabello Forty-Five years of Service LAX LA SVC OP Oscar Punzo Forty-Five years of Service BLS HIDE-A-WAY MOBILES Maria Heaberlin Forty Years of Service JBLM-LEW NORTH EXP/GAS Linda Larsen Forty Years of Service CARSON MAIN STORE Shawn Revilla Forty Years of Service YOKOTA W ELEM SCH CAFE Phillip Capshaw Thirty-Five Years of Service HANSCOM ADMIN OFFICE Rebecca Fraser Thirty-Five Years of Service LAKENHEATH MAIN STORE Edna Paredes Thirty-Five Years of Service MD-S MENSWEAR David Rivera Thirty-Five Years of Service PR-BUCHANAN CHARLEYS362 Sandra Shine Thirty-Five Years of Service LITTLERK SHPT/C6/AUTO Lavela Underwood Thirty-Five Years of Service SILL MAIN STORE Barbara Bailey Thirty Years of Service FDF AAFES FASHION Jessica Carmichael Thirty Years of Service DDDC OFFICE OF DCM Tonia Cooper Thirty Years of Service JBA-AND MAIN STORE Mike Copeland Thirty Years of Service SCHOFIELD FOOD COURT Joe Crawshaw Thirty Years of Service DAVIS M FOOD CT OVER HD Benita Elliott Thirty Years of Service BRAGG MINI MALL EXPRESS April Ford Thirty Years of Service JBLM-LEW MAIN STORE Yong Cha Garcia Thirty Years of Service BUCKLEY MAIN W/BAYS Veronica Harrelson Thirty Years of Service DDDC ORD SEL MGR Phyllis Hunter-Robinson Thirty Years of Service KW KW/QA/AE CONTG HR Martha Jones Thirty Years of Service CREDIT
    [Show full text]
  • Proof of Investors' Binding Borrowing Constraint Appendix 2: System Of
    Appendix 1: Proof of Investors’ Binding Borrowing Constraint PROOF: Use the Kuhn-Tucker condition to check whether the collateral constraint is binding. We have h I RI I mt[mt pt ht + ht − bt ] = 0 If (11) is not binding, then mt = 0: We can write the investor’s FOC Equation (18) as: I I I I h I I I I i Ut;cI ct ;ht ;nt = bIEt (1 + it)Ut+1;cI ct+1;ht+1;nt+1 (42) At steady state, we have bI (1 + i) = 1 However from (6); we know bR (1 + i) = 1 at steady state. With parameter restrictions that bR > bI; therefore bI (1 + i) < 1; contradiction. Therefore we cannot have mt = 0: Therefore, mt > 0; and I h I RI thus we have bt = mt pt ht + ht : Q.E.D. Appendix 2: System of Steady-State Conditions This appendix lays out the system of equilibrium conditions in steady state. Y cR + prhR = + idR (43) N R R R r R R R UhR c ;h = pt UcR c ;h (44) R R R R R R UnR c ;h = −WUcR c ;h (45) 1 = bR(1 + i) (46) Y cI + phd hI + hRI + ibI = + I + prhRI (47) t N I I I h I I I h [1 − bI (1 − d)]UcI c ;h p = UhI c ;h + mmp (48) I I I h I I I r h [1 − bI (1 − d)]UcI c ;h p = UcI c ;h p + mmp (49) I I I [1 − bI (1 + i)]UcI c ;h = m (50) bI = mphhI (51) 26 ©International Monetary Fund.
    [Show full text]
  • (And Misreading) the Draft Constitution in China, 1954
    Textual Anxiety Reading (and Misreading) the Draft Constitution in China, 1954 ✣ Neil J. Diamant and Feng Xiaocai In 1927, Mao Zedong famously wrote that a revolution is “not the same as inviting people to dinner” and is instead “an act of violence whereby one class overthrows the authority of another.” From the establishment of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) in 1949 until Mao’s death in 1976, his revolutionary vision became woven into the fabric of everyday life, but few years were as violent as the early 1950s.1 Rushing to consolidate power after finally defeating the Nationalist Party (Kuomintang, or KMT) in a decades- long power struggle, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) threatened the lives and livelihood of millions. During the Land Reform Campaign (1948– 1953), landowners, “local tyrants,” and wealthier villagers were targeted for repression. In the Campaign to Suppress Counterrevolutionaries in 1951, the CCP attacked former KMT activists, secret society and gang members, and various “enemy agents.”2 That same year, university faculty and secondary school teachers were forced into “thought reform” meetings, and businessmen were harshly investigated during the “Five Antis” Campaign in 1952.3 1. See Mao’s “Report of an Investigation into the Peasant Movement in Hunan,” in Stuart Schram, ed., The Political Thought of Mao Tse-tung (New York: Praeger, 1969), pp. 252–253. Although the Cultural Revolution (1966–1976) was extremely violent, the death toll, estimated at roughly 1.5 million, paled in comparison to that of the early 1950s. The nearest competitor is 1958–1959, during the Great Leap Forward.
    [Show full text]
  • The Later Han Empire (25-220CE) & Its Northwestern Frontier
    University of Pennsylvania ScholarlyCommons Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations 2012 Dynamics of Disintegration: The Later Han Empire (25-220CE) & Its Northwestern Frontier Wai Kit Wicky Tse University of Pennsylvania, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations Part of the Asian History Commons, Asian Studies Commons, and the Military History Commons Recommended Citation Tse, Wai Kit Wicky, "Dynamics of Disintegration: The Later Han Empire (25-220CE) & Its Northwestern Frontier" (2012). Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations. 589. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/589 This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/589 For more information, please contact [email protected]. Dynamics of Disintegration: The Later Han Empire (25-220CE) & Its Northwestern Frontier Abstract As a frontier region of the Qin-Han (221BCE-220CE) empire, the northwest was a new territory to the Chinese realm. Until the Later Han (25-220CE) times, some portions of the northwestern region had only been part of imperial soil for one hundred years. Its coalescence into the Chinese empire was a product of long-term expansion and conquest, which arguably defined the egionr 's military nature. Furthermore, in the harsh natural environment of the region, only tough people could survive, and unsurprisingly, the region fostered vigorous warriors. Mixed culture and multi-ethnicity featured prominently in this highly militarized frontier society, which contrasted sharply with the imperial center that promoted unified cultural values and stood in the way of a greater degree of transregional integration. As this project shows, it was the northwesterners who went through a process of political peripheralization during the Later Han times played a harbinger role of the disintegration of the empire and eventually led to the breakdown of the early imperial system in Chinese history.
    [Show full text]
  • Heng Xian and the Problem of Studying Looted Artifacts
    Dao (2013) 12:153–160 DOI 10.1007/s11712-013-9323-4 Heng Xian and the Problem of Studying Looted Artifacts Paul R. Goldin Published online: 10 April 2013 # Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 2013 Abstract Heng Xian is a previously unknown text reconstructed by Chinese scholars out of a group of more than 1,200 inscribed bamboo strips purchased by the Shanghai Museum on the Hong Kong antiquities market in 1994. The strips have all been assigned an approximate date of 300 B.C.E., and Heng Xian allegedly consists of thirteen of them, but each proposed arrangement of the strips is marred by unlikely textual transitions. The most plausible hypothesis is one that Chinese scholars do not appear to take seriously: that we are missing one or more strips. The paper concludes with a discussion of the hazards of studying unprovenanced artifacts that have appeared during China’s recent looting spree. I believe the time has come for scholars to ask themselves whether their work indirectly abets this destruction of knowledge. Keywords Heng Xian . Chinese philosophy . Shanghai Museum . Looting Heng Xian 恆先 (In the Primordial State of Constancy) is a previously unknown text reconstructed by Chinese scholars out of a group of more than 1,200 inscribed bamboo strips purchased by the Shanghai Museum on the Hong Kong antiquities market in 1994 (MA Chengyuan 2001: 1). The strips have all been assigned an approximate date of 300 B.C.E., and Heng Xian consists of thirteen of them. The first published version was edited by the veteran palaeographer LI Ling 李零 (LI Ling 2003).
    [Show full text]
  • [Re]Viewing the Chinese Landscape: Imaging the Body [In]Visible in Shanshuihua 山水畫
    [Re]viewing the Chinese Landscape: Imaging the Body [In]visible in Shanshuihua 山水畫 Lim Chye Hong 林彩鳳 A thesis submitted to the University of New South Wales in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Chinese Studies School of Languages and Linguistics Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences The University of New South Wales Australia abstract This thesis, titled '[Re]viewing the Chinese Landscape: Imaging the Body [In]visible in Shanshuihua 山水畫,' examines shanshuihua as a 'theoretical object' through the intervention of the present. In doing so, the study uses the body as an emblem for going beyond the surface appearance of a shanshuihua. This new strategy for interpreting shanshuihua proposes a 'Chinese' way of situating bodily consciousness. Thus, this study is not about shanshuihua in a general sense. Instead, it focuses on the emergence and codification of shanshuihua in the tenth and eleventh centuries with particular emphasis on the cultural construction of landscape via the agency of the body. On one level the thesis is a comprehensive study of the ideas of the body in shanshuihua, and on another it is a review of shanshuihua through situating bodily consciousness. The approach is not an abstract search for meaning but, rather, is empirically anchored within a heuristic and phenomenological framework. This framework utilises primary and secondary sources on art history and theory, sinology, medical and intellectual history, ii Chinese philosophy, phenomenology, human geography, cultural studies, and selected landscape texts. This study argues that shanshuihua needs to be understood and read not just as an image but also as a creative transformative process that is inevitably bound up with the body.
    [Show full text]
  • Possibility That They Are Virtually Synchronous Sapiens. in Order To
    KroeberAnthropological Society Papers, Nos. 71-72, 1990 A Case Study of the "erectus" - "sapiens" Transition in Asia: Hominid Remains from Hexian and Chaoxian Counties, Anhui Province, China Dennis A. Etler Newly discoveredfossil hominidsfrom the late middle Pleistocene ofChina demonstrate that archaic forms of Homo sapiens were either coexistent with or slightly more recent than advancedforms of Homo erectus. This is most clearly seen at sites in Hexian and Chaoxian counties, Anhui province, which date to between 150-200,000 YBP by uranium series tests. The replacement of H. erectus by archaic H. sapiens in China is characterized by the retention of a significant component of heritage features in archaic H. sapiens, overlaid by a mosaic of changes in craniofacial anatomy that trend towards modern humans. This new evidence givespowerful support to the regional continuity theory of human evolution in eastAsia. Furthermore, it suggests that the transitionfrom H. erectus to archaic H. sapiens in China was relatively quick andpossibly modulated by a heightening ofgeneflow between western and eastern Asia at approximately 250,000 YBP. INTRODUCTION per layers at ZKD Locality 1 (Chen et al. 1987; Chen and Yuan 1988). The uranium series The accelerated pace of discovery of late analyses, based on the internal concordance of middle Pleistocene - early late Pleistocene human 230Th/234U and 231pa/235U activity ratios of fossil remains in China over the last two decades bones and teeth associated with the human makes it possible to approach the question of the remains, date the Hexian site to between 150- "erectus" - "sapiens" transition in east Asia from 190,000 YBP and the Chaoxian site to between an entirely new empirical basis.
    [Show full text]
  • AFRICA in CHINA's FOREIGN POLICY
    AFRICA in CHINA’S FOREIGN POLICY YUN SUN April 2014 Yun Sun is a fellow at the East Asia Program of the Henry L. Stimson Center. NOTE: This paper was produced during the author’s visiting fellowship with the John L. Thornton China Center and the Africa Growth Initiative at Brookings. ABOUT THE JOHN L. THORNTON CHINA CENTER: The John L. Thornton China Center provides cutting-edge research, analysis, dialogue and publications that focus on China’s emergence and the implications of this for the United States, China’s neighbors and the rest of the world. Scholars at the China Center address a wide range of critical issues related to China’s modernization, including China’s foreign, economic and trade policies and its domestic challenges. In 2006 the Brookings Institution also launched the Brookings-Tsinghua Center for Public Policy, a partnership between Brookings and China’s Tsinghua University in Beijing that seeks to produce high quality and high impact policy research in areas of fundamental importance for China’s development and for U.S.-China relations. ABOUT THE AFRICA GROWTH INITIATIVE: The Africa Growth Initiative brings together African scholars to provide policymakers with high-quality research, expertise and innovative solutions that promote Africa’s economic development. The initiative also collaborates with research partners in the region to raise the African voice in global policy debates on Africa. Its mission is to deliver research from an African perspective that informs sound policy, creating sustained economic growth and development for the people of Africa. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS: I would like to express my gratitude to the many people who saw me through this paper; to all those who generously provided their insights, advice and comments throughout the research and writing process; and to those who assisted me in the research trips and in the editing, proofreading and design of this paper.
    [Show full text]