Bibliography 1

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Bibliography 1 Bibliography 1 Works Cited Analects (Lun yu), cited according to H-Y index, (1940). Archival Records (Shiji): see SJ. Baoshan Chu mu (1991). ed. Hubei Province, Jingsha Railroad Archaeology Unit (Beijing, Wenwu). BJY: Bo Juyi , Bo shi Changqing ji , in WYG, vol. 1080. BSS: Basic Sinological Series (Guoxue jiben cong shu) (Taibei, Wenhua, 1968). Chen: Chen Di , Shangshu shuyan , in WHKSK, vol. 64. Cheng3: Cheng Dachang , Shi lun , in Xuehai leibian , ed. Cao Rong (Taibei,Yiwen, 1967), vol. 12 (Baibu congshu jicheng 26). ChengY: Cheng Yi , Yizhuan , Er Cheng quanshu (SBBY). CHAC: The Cambridge History of China, vol. 0, ed. Michael Loewe and Edward Shaughnessy (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1999). Bibliography 2 CHOC: The Cambridge History of China, vol. I , ed. Michael Loewe and Denis Twitchett (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1986). Chuxue: Chuxue ji , ed. Xu Jian , et al. (Beijing, Zhonghua, 1962 rpt.), 3 vols. CIS: Chôshô isho shûsei , comp. by Yasui Kôzan and Nakamura Shôhachi (Tokyo, Meitoku,1971-), 6 vols. CQFL: Chunqiu fanlu , tradit. attributed to Dong Zhongshu (BSS, vol. 39). CQJZ: Chunqiu jingzhuan jijie , comp. by Du Yu (Shanghai, Guji, 1974), 2 vols. CQT: Chen Qiaocong , Maoshi Zhengjian gaizi shuo , in HQJJX, vol. 257. CQYu: Chunqiu jueyu (also known as Shiyu ), attrib. to Dong Zhongshu, in MGH, II, 1180-81. CQZSJ: Du Yu , Chunqiu Zuoshi jingzhuan jijie . See Bibliography 3 CQJZ. CQZZG: Chunqiu Zuozhuan gu , comp. by Hong Liangji (Beijing, Zhonghua, 1982; rpt. 1991, based on the 1828 and 1878 woodblock editions), 2 vols. CYW: Chen Yaowen , Wujing jiyi , WYG, vol. 184, pp. 779- 864. DB: Diao Bao , Yi zhuo , WYG, vol. 39, pp. 165-596. DDLC: Da Dai Liji , attributed to Dai De (SBBY). Translation: Grynpas (1967). Declaration: "Declaration of Cultural Construction on a Chinese Basis" (Jan. 10, 1935), published anonymously by the CC Clique, in Wenhua jianshe 1:4, 1-5. DHHY: Dong Han huiyao , comp. by Xu Tianlin (Taibei, World Books, 1960). Ding: Ding Yan , "Suishu jingjizhi Kong shi zhengyi yu Dong Jin guwen duo weici, shi Tangren yi yi zhi bushi yu Wu Cailao Zhuzi" Bibliography 4 , Shangshu yulun , in HQJJX, vol. 194. DMB: Dictionary of Ming Biography, ed. L. Carrington Goodrich and Chaoying Fang (New York, Columbia, 1976). ECT: Early Chinese Texts: A Bibliographical Guide, ed. Michael Loewe (Berkeley, Society for the Study of Early China, 1993). Early China Special Monograph Series, no. 2. Er: Er Cheng ji (Beijing, Zhonghua rpt., l981). ESB: Wang Mingsheng , E shu bian (Shanghai, Xinhua, 1958), 2 vols. FBIS: Foreign Broadcast Information Service (China). FSTY: Fengsu tongyi fu tongjian (Peiping, Centre franco- chinois d'études sinologiques de Pekin, 1943). FY: Yang Xiong , Fayan , (Xinbian) Zhuzi jicheng (Taibei, World Books, 1978; rpt. of Shanghai, 1935 ed.), 8 vols. Bibliography 5 GaoSQ: Gao Shiqi , Zuozhuan jishi benmo , in Siku quanshu zhenben qiji (Taibei, 1977), vol. 70-75. GJG: Shangshu tongjian , ed. Gu Jiegang (Beijing, Jianzhu, 1982). Translation: Legge (1982); Karlgren (1950). GSB: Gushibian , ed. Gu Jiegang , Luo Genze , et. al. (Peiping, Peiping Pushe, 1927-36), 6 vols. GSR: Bernhard Karlgren, Grammata Serica Recensa, rpt. from Bulletin of the Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities 29 (1957). GuD: Gu Donggao , Du Chunqiu oubi (1874), WYG, vols. 179-80. Guwenyuan: Guwenyuan , annot. by Zhang Qiao (Shanghai, Commercial Press, 1939). GY: Guoyu , BSS vol. 381. GYW: Gu Yanwu , Tinglin wenji (SBCK). GZ2: Guanzi jiaozheng , ed. Dai Wang , also in BSS vol. 97. Bibliography 6 GZ: Guanzi , BSS vol. 97. H-Y index: Harvard-Yenching index series. HAG: Hu Anguo , Chunqiu Hushi zhuan , SBCK xubian (Shanghai, 1934; rpt. Taibei, Commercial Press, 1966). Han Yu2: Han Yu , Han Changli wenji jiaozhu , punctuated by Ma Tongbo (Shanghai, Gudian, 1957). Han Yu: Han Yu , Changli xiansheng ji (SBBY). He Xiu: Chunqiu Gongyangzhuan Heshi jiegu , annotated by He Xiu (SBBY). HeK: He Kai , Shijing shiben guyi , WYG, vol. 81. HFZ: Han Feizi jijie , comp. by Wang Xianshen (Changsha, 1862; rpt.,Taibei, World Books, l962). Translation: Liao (1939). HHS: Fan Ye , Hou Hanshu (Beijing, Zhonghua, 1962), 8 vols. Bibliography 7 HK: Xu Kan , Zhong lun (SBCK). HNZ: Huainanzi (SBBY). HQJJ: Huang Qing jingjie , comp. by Ruan Yuan (Guangzhou wentang, 1860; facs. rpt., Taibei, Fuxing, 1961), 20 vols. HQJJX: Huang Qing jingjie xubian (Jiangyin, n.p., 1888). HS: Ban Gu , Hanshu (Beijing, Zhonghua, 1962). Translation: for HS 1-11, 99, see Dubs (1938); for HS 24, see Swann (1950), in Secondary Sources. HSWZ: Han Ying , Hanshi waizhuan (SBCK suoben no. 4). Huang: Huang Zongxi , Song Yüan xuean , BSS vols. 40-43. Hui: Hui Zhouti , Shishuo , WYG vol. 87, pp. 1-32. JDSW: Lu Deming , Jingdian shiwen (SBCK). Jiagu: Jiagu jinwen zidian , ed. Fang Shuxin et al. (Sichuan, Sichuan University History Department, 1993). Bibliography 8 Jiagu2: Jiagu wenzidian , ed. Xu Zhongshu (Sichuan, Xinhua, 1988). Jiao: Jiao Xun , Maoshi bushu , in HQJJ vol. 16, pp. 12245-87. Jin: Jinshu, comp. by Fang Xuanling (Beijing, Zhonghua, 1974), 10 vols. JYK: Zhu Yizun , Jingyi kao (SBBY). KCZ: Kong congzi (SBCK). Kinbun: Shirakawa Shizuka , Kinbun tsûhaku (Kobe, Hakutsuru bijutsukan, 1962-84). Kongfu dangan: Kongfu dang'an xuanbian , ed. Sun Jian and Kong Fanyin , under the direction of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Modern History Institute and the Shangdong Cultural Relics Supervisory Committee (Beijing, Zhonghua), 2 vols. Kongjia: Kongzi jiayu , comp. by Wang Su (SBBY). KZJY: Kongzi jiayu (SBBY). Bibliography 9 LBQ: Liang Shaoren , Liangban qiuyu an suibi (Sinkiang, Xinjiang Renmin, 1995), 2 vols. LDZ: Li Dingzuo , Zhouyi jijie , BSS, vol. 29. LH: Wang Chong , Lunheng jijie , ed. Liu Pansui (n. p.; 1932; rpt., Taibei, World Books, 1967), 2 vols. LiuZJ: Liu Zhiji , Shitong shiping , annotated by Pu Qilong (Taibei, Huashi, 1981). LiuZY: Liu Zongyuan , Liu Hedong ji (Beijing, Zhonghua, 1958). LiuZY2: Liu Zongyuan, Liu Zongyuan quanji (Hong Kong, Kwongchi, n.d.). LJ: Liji (SBBY), cited according to the H-Y index (1936). Translation: Legge (1885). LJAL: Zheng Qiao , Liujing aolun , WYG, vol. 184, pp. 1-122. LJZS: Liji zhushu , commentary by Zheng Xuan , included in Bibliography 10 SSJZS. LNZ: Liu Xiang , Lienü zhuan (SBBY). LSCQ: Lüshi Chunqiu , in (Xinbian) Zhuzi jicheng (Taibei, World Books, 1978; rpt. of Shanghai, 1935 ed.). Lü: Lü Zuqian , "Lüshi jia shudu shiji" , WYG, vol. 73, pp. 321-798. LYL: Zheng Xuan , "Liu yi lun" , in MGH, IV, 1943-45. LYYS: Lunyu yishu , comp. by He Yan , annotated by Huang Kan , in Lunyu jicheng (1923; Taibei, Yi-wen, 1966), 5 , vol. 22-26. LZ: Laozi Daodejing (SBBY). Translation: Waley (1934); Lau (1963). Ma Su: Ma Su , Zuozhuan shiwei (Mindetang, 1898; facs. rpt., Hong Kong, Longmen, 1966). Mao shi: Chen Qiaocong , Mao shi Zhengjian gaizi shuo , in HQJJX, vol. 257. Bibliography 11 MCL-B: Mao Qiling, Bailu zhou zhuke shuo shi , in HQJJX, vol. 4. Mencius , cited according to the H-Y index. Translation: D.C. Lau. MGH: Yuhanshan fangji yishu , comp. by Ma Guohan (Jinan, Huanghuaguan, 1871; rpt., Taibei, World, 1958), 6 vols. MQL: Mao Qiling , Jingwen , Siku quanshu (Taibei, Commercial Press, 1983 rpt. of the Palace edition), vol. 191. MWD: Mawangdui Hanmu boshu (Beijing, Wenwu, 1983), 3 vols. MZYD: Mozi yinde , cited according to the H-Y index (1961). NHH: Zeng Pu , Niehaihua ( Taibei, Guangya rpt. of Shanghai, Zhenmeishan, 1946 ed.). OYX: Ouyang Xiu , Ouyang Wenzhong ji (SBBY). OYX-B: Ouyang Xiu, Ouyang Yongshu ji , BSS vol. 286. Bibliography 12 OYX-C: Ouyang Xiu, Ouyang Xiu quanji (Hong Kong, Guangzhi, 1965), 2 vols. PiLin: anon., Pi Lin pi Kong yundong jiaoyu geming shenru fazhan (Shaanxi, Shaanxi Renmin, 1974). QCYD: Chunqiu jingzhuan yinde , cited according to the H-Y index (1937). Translation: Legge (1892), vol. 5; Watson (1989). QFJ: Zheng Xuan , Qi feiji , Wenjingtang congshu , comp. by Sun Fengyi (Taibei, World Books, 1968; rpt. of a Jiaqing ed.), in Baibu congshu jicheng 38, vol. 11. Queli: Queli zhi , comp. by Chen Hao (Jinan, Jinan Shandong youyi shushe, 1989). Ruan: Ruan Yuan , "Shi sung" , Yanjingshi yiji (Taibei, World Books, 1963), 3 vols. Ruan2: Ruan Yuan, Maoshi zhushu (SBBY). RZL: Gu Yanwu , Gu Yanwu Rizhilu , ed. Zhang Binglin and Huang Kan , punctuated by Xu Wenshan (Taibei, Bibliography 13 Minglun, 1970). San: Xinzhu Tangshi sanbaishou , comp. by Zhu Dake (Beijing, Zhonghua, 1958). SBBY: Sibu beiyao . SBCK: Sibu congkan . SGLFJ: Zheng Xuan , Shi Guliang feiji , Huang shi yishu kao , Tongde tang jingjie (Taibei, Yiwen, 1970 rpt. of Jiangsu, 1934 ed.). SGZ: Chen Shou , Sanguozhi (Beijing, Zhonghua, 1959), 5 vols. Shao: Shao Yichen , Lun Zhongguo wenxue zhong de yinjie (Hong Kong, Lung-men, 1969; rpt. 1972). Shi (K): Shijing zhengyi . See Zhengyi. Shiming: Shiming shuzheng bu , ed. Wang Xianqian (Shanghai, Xinhua, 1984). Bibliography 14 Shitong: Pu Qilong , Shitong tongshi , BSS, vol. 399. SJ: Sima Qian , Shiji (Beijing, 1959), 10 vols. Translation: for SJ 7-12, 17-19, 48-59, 84, 89-104, 106, see Watson (1971); for SJ 130, see Watson (1958), in Secondary Sources. SJZHZ: Shijing zhuan hui zuan , ed. Wang Hongxu (Taibei, Ding Wenhua, 1967; rpt. Taibei, 1972). SKTY: Siku quanshu zongmu tiyao . ed. Ji Yun and others (Shanghai, Commercial Press, 1934 rpt.), 4 vols. SS: Wei Zheng , Suishu (Beijing, Zhonghua, 1973), 6 vols. SSDZ: Shangshu dazhuan , ICS Ancient Chinese Texts Concordance Series, Classical Works no. 5 (Hong Kong, Commercial Press, 1994). SSGWSZ: Yan Ruoju , Shangshu guwen shuzheng , in HQJJX, vol. 6-10. SSJZS: Shisanjing zhushu , ed. Ruan Yuan (Taibei, Dahua, 1977 facs. rpt. of an 1816 ed.), 6 vols. Bibliography 15 SSXY: Liu Yiqiing , Shishuo xinyu , BSS, vol. 244. Survey: Survey of China Mainland Press. SuS: Su Shi Yizhuan , Congshu jicheng (Taibei, Guangwen, 1974), ts'e 392. SW zhu: Shuowen jiezi Duanzhu , comp. by Duan Yucai (SBBY). SW: Xu Shen , Shuowen jiezi fu jianzi (Hong Kong, Taiping Books, 1966). SY: Liu Xiang , Shuoyuan (SBBY). SYC: Shao Yichen , Lijing tonglun , in HQJJX, vol. 284.
Recommended publications
  • Use Style: Paper Title
    5th International Conference on Education, Language, Art and Inter-cultural Communication (ICELAIC 2018) Advances in Social Science, Education and Humanities Research Volume 289 Moscow, Russia 28-29 November 2018 Editors: Randall Green Iana Rumbal Yong Zhang Manjin Zhang ISBN: 978-1-5108-7978-2 Printed from e-media with permission by: Curran Associates, Inc. 57 Morehouse Lane Red Hook, NY 12571 Some format issues inherent in the e-media version may also appear in this print version. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence. Licence details: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. Conference Website: https://www.atlantis-press.com/proceedings/icelaic-18 Printed by Curran Associates, Inc. (2019) For permission requests, please contact the publisher: Atlantis Press Amsterdam / Paris Email: [email protected] Additional copies of this publication are available from: Curran Associates, Inc. 57 Morehouse Lane Red Hook, NY 12571 USA Phone: 845-758-0400 Fax: 845-758-2633 Email: [email protected] Web: www.proceedings.com TABLE OF CONTENTS FORMATION OF SYSTEMATIC MANAGEMENT KNOWLEDGE AS AN IMPORTANT COMPONENT OF MODERN POLITICAL EDUCATION...........................................................................................................................................................1 Kulinchenko Alexander, Mamaeva Yulia, Ageeva Elena, Sedykh Nikolay HUMANITARIAN MEASUREMENT OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS BETWEEN RUSSIA AND ECUADOR ..........................................................................................................................................................................................................6
    [Show full text]
  • William T. Rowe
    Bao Shichen: An Early Nineteenth-Century Chinese Agrarian Reformer William T. Rowe Johns Hopkins University Prefatory note to the Agrarian Studies Program: I was greatly flattered to receive an invitation from Jim Scott to present to this exalted group, and could not refuse. I’m also a bit embarrassed, however, because I’m not working on anything these days that falls significantly within your arena of interest. I am studying in general a reformist scholar of the early nineteenth century, named Bao Shichen. The contexts in which I have tended to view him (and around which I organized panels for the Association for Asian Studies Annual Meetings in 2007 and 2009) have been (1) the broader reformist currents of his era, spawned by a deepening sense of dynastic crisis after ca. 1800, and (2) an enduring Qing political “counter discourse” beginning in the mid-seventeenth century and continuing down to, and likely through, the Republican Revolution of 1911. Neither of these rubrics are directly concerned with “agrarian studies.” Bao did, however, have quite a bit to say in passing about agriculture, village life, and especially local rural governance. In this paper I have tried to draw together some of this material, but I fear it is as yet none too neat. In my defense, I would add that previously in my career I have done a fair amount of work on what legitimately is agrarian history, and indeed have taught courses on that subject (students are less interested in such offerings now than they used to be, in my observation).
    [Show full text]
  • Dressing for the Times: Fashion in Tang Dynasty China (618-907)
    Dressing for the Times: Fashion in Tang Dynasty China (618-907) BuYun Chen Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2013 © 2013 BuYun Chen All rights reserved ABSTRACT Dressing for the Times: Fashion in Tang Dynasty China (618-907) BuYun Chen During the Tang dynasty, an increased capacity for change created a new value system predicated on the accumulation of wealth and the obsolescence of things that is best understood as fashion. Increased wealth among Tang elites was paralleled by a greater investment in clothes, which imbued clothes with new meaning. Intellectuals, who viewed heightened commercial activity and social mobility as symptomatic of an unstable society, found such profound changes in the vestimentary landscape unsettling. For them, a range of troubling developments, including crisis in the central government, deep suspicion of the newly empowered military and professional class, and anxiety about waste and obsolescence were all subsumed under the trope of fashionable dressing. The clamor of these intellectuals about the widespread desire to be “current” reveals the significant space fashion inhabited in the empire – a space that was repeatedly gendered female. This dissertation considers fashion as a system of social practices that is governed by material relations – a system that is also embroiled in the politics of the gendered self and the body. I demonstrate that this notion of fashion is the best way to understand the process through which competition for status and self-identification among elites gradually broke away from the imperial court and its system of official ranks.
    [Show full text]
  • The History of Holt Cheng Starts 88Th
    The Very Beginning (written with great honor by cousin Basilio Chen 鄭/郑华树) The Roots Chang Kee traces his family roots as the 87th descendant of Duke Huan of Zheng (鄭桓公), thus posthumorously, Dr. Holt Cheng is referred to in the ancient family genealogical tradition Duke Holt Cheng, descendant of the royal family Zhou (周) from the Western Zhou Dynasty. The roots and family history of Chang Kee starts over 2,800 years ago in the Zhou Dynasty (周朝) when King Xuan (周宣王, 841 BC - 781 BC), the eleventh King of the Zhou Dynasty, made his younger brother Ji You (姬友, 806 BC-771 BC) the Duke of Zheng, establishing what would be the last bastion of Western Zhou (西周朝) and at the same time establishing the first person to adopt the surname Zheng (also Romanized as Cheng in Wades-Giles Dictionary of Pronunciation). The surname Zheng (鄭) which means "serious" or " solemn", is also unique in that is the only few surname that also has a City-State name associated it, Zhengzhou city (鄭國 or鄭州in modern times). Thus, the State of Zheng (鄭國) was officially established by the first Zheng (鄭,) Duke Huan of Zheng (鄭桓公), in 806 BC as a city-state in the middle of ancient China, modern Henan Province. Its ruling house had the surname Ji (姬), making them a branch of the Zhou royal house, and were given the rank of bo (伯,爵), corresponding roughly to an earl. Later, this branch adopted officially the surname Zheng (鄭) and thus Ji You (or Earl Ji You, as it would refer to in royal title) was known posthumously as Duke Huan of Zheng (鄭桓公) becoming the first person to adopt the family surname of Zheng (鄭), Chang Kee’s family name in Chinese.
    [Show full text]
  • Clara Wing-Chung Ho FUSHI
    Clara Wing-chung Ho FUSHI: THE SECOND SEX AND THE THIRD SEX IN TRADITIONAL CHINA* A Double Meaning of Fushi If we borrow the Western concept to describe women as the second sex in Chinese history,1 then eunuchs could certainly be understood as the third sex.2 The third sex was an artificial one. It was the first sex, male, aiming to ensure the chastity of the second sex, who created a third sex. In imperial families, castration of male attendants made it possible to prevent palace * The author gratefully acknowledges Professor Kwai-cheung Lo, who read the first draft of this article and offered many valuable comments. An earlier version of this article was presented at the workshop “The Future of Chinese Gender Studies in Europe, Asia and the United States” held in Luxembourg, June 24-26, 2005. The author also acknowledges all the constructive comments and suggestions given by the workshop participants, Professors Harriet Zurndorfer and Angela Ki Che Leung in particular. The author is also grateful to Professor Paolo Santan- gelo and Dr. Donatella Guida for their editorial assistance. The shortcomings of the final ver- sion are, of course, the author’s own. 1 Simone de Beauvior’s (1908-1986) Le Deuxième Sexe (The Second Sex) was first published in French in 1949. Employing biological, psychological and historical analysis, it explains how the men-women relation was compared to the master-slave relation. The book was soon trans- lated into many languages and became a major and well-known reference on gender studies in the second half of the 20th century.
    [Show full text]
  • Table of Contents (PDF)
    Cancer Prevention Research Table of Contents June 2017 * Volume 10 * Number 6 RESEARCH ARTICLES 355 Combined Genetic Biomarkers and Betel Quid Chewing for Identifying High-Risk Group for 319 Statin Use, Serum Lipids, and Prostate Oral Cancer Occurrence Inflammation in Men with a Negative Prostate Chia-Min Chung, Chien-Hung Lee, Mu-Kuan Chen, Biopsy: Results from the REDUCE Trial Ka-Wo Lee, Cheng-Che E. Lan, Aij-Lie Kwan, Emma H. Allott, Lauren E. Howard, Adriana C. Vidal, Ming-Hsui Tsai, and Ying-Chin Ko Daniel M. Moreira, Ramiro Castro-Santamaria, Gerald L. Andriole, and Stephen J. Freedland 363 A Presurgical Study of Lecithin Formulation of Green Tea Extract in Women with Early 327 Sleep Duration across the Adult Lifecourse and Breast Cancer Risk of Lung Cancer Mortality: A Cohort Study in Matteo Lazzeroni, Aliana Guerrieri-Gonzaga, Xuanwei, China Sara Gandini, Harriet Johansson, Davide Serrano, Jason Y. Wong, Bryan A. Bassig, Roel Vermeulen, Wei Hu, Massimiliano Cazzaniga, Valentina Aristarco, Bofu Ning, Wei Jie Seow, Bu-Tian Ji, Debora Macis, Serena Mora, Pietro Caldarella, George S. Downward, Hormuzd A. Katki, Gianmatteo Pagani, Giancarlo Pruneri, Antonella Riva, Francesco Barone-Adesi, Nathaniel Rothman, Giovanna Petrangolini, Paolo Morazzoni, Robert S. Chapman, and Qing Lan Andrea DeCensi, and Bernardo Bonanni 337 Bitter Melon Enhances Natural Killer–Mediated Toxicity against Head and Neck Cancer Cells Sourav Bhattacharya, Naoshad Muhammad, CORRECTION Robert Steele, Jacki Kornbluth, and Ratna B. Ray 371 Correction: New Perspectives of Curcumin 345 Bioactivity of Oral Linaclotide in Human in Cancer Prevention Colorectum for Cancer Chemoprevention David S. Weinberg, Jieru E. Lin, Nathan R.
    [Show full text]
  • Recent Articles from the China Journal of System Engineering Prepared
    Recent Articles from the China Journal of System Engineering Prepared by the University of Washington Quantum System Engineering (QSE) Group.1 Bibliography [1] Mu A-Hua, Zhou Shao-Lei, and Yu Xiao-Li. Research on fast self-adaptive genetic algorithm and its simulation. Journal of System Simulation, 16(1):122 – 5, 2004. [2] Guan Ai-Jie, Yu Da-Tai, Wang Yun-Ji, An Yue-Sheng, and Lan Rong-Qin. Simulation of recon-sat reconing process and evaluation of reconing effect. Journal of System Simulation, 16(10):2261 – 3, 2004. [3] Hao Ai-Min, Pang Guo-Feng, and Ji Yu-Chun. Study and implementation for fidelity of air roaming system above the virtual mount qomolangma. Journal of System Simulation, 12(4):356 – 9, 2000. [4] Sui Ai-Na, Wu Wei, and Zhao Qin-Ping. The analysis of the theory and technology on virtual assembly and virtual prototype. Journal of System Simulation, 12(4):386 – 8, 2000. [5] Xu An, Fan Xiu-Min, Hong Xin, Cheng Jian, and Huang Wei-Dong. Research and development on interactive simulation system for astronauts walking in the outer space. Journal of System Simulation, 16(9):1953 – 6, Sept. 2004. [6] Zhang An and Zhang Yao-Zhong. Study on effectiveness top analysis of group air-to-ground aviation weapon system. Journal of System Simulation, 14(9):1225 – 8, Sept. 2002. [7] Zhang An, He Sheng-Qiang, and Lv Ming-Qiang. Modeling simulation of group air-to-ground attack-defense confrontation system. Journal of System Simulation, 16(6):1245 – 8, 2004. [8] Wu An-Bo, Wang Jian-Hua, Geng Ying-San, and Wang Xiao-Feng.
    [Show full text]
  • The Old Master
    INTRODUCTION Four main characteristics distinguish this book from other translations of Laozi. First, the base of my translation is the oldest existing edition of Laozi. It was excavated in 1973 from a tomb located in Mawangdui, the city of Changsha, Hunan Province of China, and is usually referred to as Text A of the Mawangdui Laozi because it is the older of the two texts of Laozi unearthed from it.1 Two facts prove that the text was written before 202 bce, when the first emperor of the Han dynasty began to rule over the entire China: it does not follow the naming taboo of the Han dynasty;2 its handwriting style is close to the seal script that was prevalent in the Qin dynasty (221–206 bce). Second, I have incorporated the recent archaeological discovery of Laozi-related documents, disentombed in 1993 in Jishan District’s tomb complex in the village of Guodian, near the city of Jingmen, Hubei Province of China. These documents include three bundles of bamboo slips written in the Chu script and contain passages related to the extant Laozi.3 Third, I have made extensive use of old commentaries on Laozi to provide the most comprehensive interpretations possible of each passage. Finally, I have examined myriad Chinese classic texts that are closely associated with the formation of Laozi, such as Zhuangzi, Lüshi Chunqiu (Spring and Autumn Annals of Mr. Lü), Han Feizi, and Huainanzi, to understand the intellectual and historical context of Laozi’s ideas. In addition to these characteristics, this book introduces several new interpretations of Laozi.
    [Show full text]
  • A Dynamic Schedule Based on Integrated Time Performance Prediction
    2009 First International Conference on Information Science and Engineering (ICISE 2009) Nanjing, China 26 – 28 December 2009 Pages 1-906 IEEE Catalog Number: CFP0976H-PRT ISBN: 978-1-4244-4909-5 1/6 TABLE OF CONTENTS TRACK 01: HIGH-PERFORMANCE AND PARALLEL COMPUTING A DYNAMIC SCHEDULE BASED ON INTEGRATED TIME PERFORMANCE PREDICTION ......................................................1 Wei Zhou, Jing He, Shaolin Liu, Xien Wang A FORMAL METHOD OF VOLUNTEER COMPUTING .........................................................................................................................5 Yu Wang, Zhijian Wang, Fanfan Zhou A GRID ENVIRONMENT BASED SATELLITE IMAGES PROCESSING.............................................................................................9 X. Zhang, S. Chen, J. Fan, X. Wei A LANGUAGE OF NEUTRAL MODELING COMMAND FOR SYNCHRONIZED COLLABORATIVE DESIGN AMONG HETEROGENEOUS CAD SYSTEMS ........................................................................................................................12 Wanfeng Dou, Xiaodong Song, Xiaoyong Zhang A LOW-ENERGY SET-ASSOCIATIVE I-CACHE DESIGN WITH LAST ACCESSED WAY BASED REPLACEMENT AND PREDICTING ACCESS POLICY.......................................................................................................................16 Zhengxing Li, Quansheng Yang A MEASUREMENT MODEL OF REUSABILITY FOR EVALUATING COMPONENT...................................................................20 Shuoben Bi, Xueshi Dong, Shengjun Xue A M-RSVP RESOURCE SCHEDULING MECHANISM IN PPVOD
    [Show full text]
  • Research on the Time When Ping Split Into Yin and Yang in Chinese Northern Dialect
    Chinese Studies 2014. Vol.3, No.1, 19-23 Published Online February 2014 in SciRes (http://www.scirp.org/journal/chnstd) http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/chnstd.2014.31005 Research on the Time When Ping Split into Yin and Yang in Chinese Northern Dialect Ma Chuandong1*, Tan Lunhua2 1College of Fundamental Education, Sichuan Normal University, Chengdu, China 2Sichuan Science and Technology University for Employees, Chengdu, China Email: *[email protected] Received January 7th, 2014; revised February 8th, 2014; accepted February 18th, 2014 Copyright © 2014 Ma Chuandong, Tan Lunhua. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. In accordance of the Creative Commons Attribution License all Copyrights © 2014 are reserved for SCIRP and the owner of the intellectual property Ma Chuandong, Tan Lun- hua. All Copyright © 2014 are guarded by law and by SCIRP as a guardian. The phonetic phenomenon “ping split into yin and yang” 平分阴阳 is one of the most important changes of Chinese tones in the early modern Chinese, which is reflected clearly in Zhongyuan Yinyun 中原音韵 by Zhou Deqing 周德清 (1277-1356) in the Yuan Dynasty. The authors of this paper think the phe- nomenon “ping split into yin and yang” should not have occurred so late as in the Yuan Dynasty, based on previous research results and modern Chinese dialects, making use of historical comparative method and rhyming books. The changes of tones have close relationship with the voiced and voiceless initials in Chinese, and the voiced initials have turned into voiceless in Song Dynasty, so it could not be in the Yuan Dynasty that ping split into yin and yang, but no later than the Song Dynasty.
    [Show full text]
  • The Bolshevil{S and the Chinese Revolution 1919-1927 Chinese Worlds
    The Bolshevil{s and the Chinese Revolution 1919-1927 Chinese Worlds Chinese Worlds publishes high-quality scholarship, research monographs, and source collections on Chinese history and society from 1900 into the next century. "Worlds" signals the ethnic, cultural, and political multiformity and regional diversity of China, the cycles of unity and division through which China's modern history has passed, and recent research trends toward regional studies and local issues. It also signals that Chineseness is not contained within territorial borders ­ overseas Chinese communities in all countries and regions are also "Chinese worlds". The editors see them as part of a political, economic, social, and cultural continuum that spans the Chinese mainland, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Macau, South­ East Asia, and the world. The focus of Chinese Worlds is on modern politics and society and history. It includes both history in its broader sweep and specialist monographs on Chinese politics, anthropology, political economy, sociology, education, and the social­ science aspects of culture and religions. The Literary Field of New Fourth Artny Twentieth-Century China Communist Resistance along the Edited by Michel Hockx Yangtze and the Huai, 1938-1941 Gregor Benton Chinese Business in Malaysia Accumulation, Ascendance, A Road is Made Accommodation Communism in Shanghai 1920-1927 Edmund Terence Gomez Steve Smith Internal and International Migration The Bolsheviks and the Chinese Chinese Perspectives Revolution 1919-1927 Edited by Frank N Pieke and Hein Mallee
    [Show full text]
  • The Evolution of Song-Jiang Battle Array and the Relationship Between Song-Jiang Battle Array and the Rural Society of Southern Taiwan
    www.ccsenet.org/ach Asian Culture and History Vol. 2, No. 2; July 2010 The Evolution of Song-Jiang Battle Array and the Relationship between Song-Jiang Battle Array and the Rural Society of Southern Taiwan Chengan Chin Department of Tropical Agriculture and International Cooperation National Pingtung University of Science and Technology, Taiwan Tel: 886-910-834-832 E-mail: [email protected] Chaurtzuhn Chen Professor, Academic Dean and Vice President National Pingtung University of Science and Technology, Taiwan E-mail: [email protected] Lungming Tsai Professor of Chinese Culture University, Taiwan E-mail: [email protected] Abstract This paper attends to find out the relationship among religious belief, society and Song-Jiang Battle Array in southern Taiwan, by using the qualitative methods which include literature analyses and the fieldwork investigations. In the process of research, the origin and development of Song-Jiang Battle Array are emerging step by step, which demonstrates that development and evolvement of Song-Jiang Battle Array are most related to contemporaneous social formations. They influenced the relationship between government and people and also affected the relationship between religious belief and Song-Jiang Battle Array. In the end, people’s devotions toward religion are the main force of uniting people in rural society of southern Taiwan and have played an essential role in helping maintain their heritage. All of that is not established in one night. It has been evolving for hundreds of years. Keywords: Song-Jiang Battle Array, Southern Taiwan, Religious belief, Government, Folk art array 1. Introduction The famous folk art array “Song-Jiang Battle Array” (Song-Jiang Zhen) only exists in Taiwan as an unique folk art skill in the world.
    [Show full text]