Bibliography

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Bibliography Between Winds and Clouds Bin Yang Bibliography Abu-Lughod, Janet L. Before European Hegemony. New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1989. Ahmad, Nisar. "Assam-Bengal Trade in the Medieval Period: A Numismatic Perspective." Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 33 (1996), 169-198. Allen, Barry. "Power/Knowledge." In Critical Essays on Michel Foucault, ed. Karlis Racevskis. New York: G. K. Hall, 1999, 69-81. Anningzhou Zhi (Gazetteer of Anning Department). Kangxi edition (1709). Armijo-Hussein, Jacqueline Misty. "Sayyid'Ajall Shams Al-Din: A Muslim from Central Asia, Serving the Mongols in China and Bringing 'Civilization' to Yunnan." Ph.D. diss., Harvard University, 1996. Atwill, David G. The Chinese Sultanate: Islam, Ethnicity, and the Panthay Rebellion in Southwest China, 1856–1873. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 2005. Backus, Charles. Nanzhao and Tang's Southwestern Frontier. London: Cambridge University Press, 1981. Basham, A. L. The Wonder That Was India. New York: Grove Press, 1959. Beckwith, Christopher I. The Tibetan Empire in Central Asia: A History of the Struggle for Great Power among Tibetans, Turks, Arabs, and Chinese during the Early Middle Ages. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1987. Bockman, Harald. "Yunnan Trade in Han Times: Transit, Tribute and Trivia." In Asian Trade Routes, ed. Karl Reinhold Haellquist. London: Curzon Press, 1991, 174-180. Brown, Melissa, ed. Negotiating Ethnicities in China and Taiwan. Berkeley: The Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California, 1996. Caffrey, Kevin. "Who 'Who' Is, and Other Local Poetics of National Policy." China Information, 18 (July 2004), 243-274. Cammann, Schuyler Van R. "Archaeological Evidence for Chinese Contacts with India during the Han Dynasty." Sinologica 5, no. 1 (1956), 1-19. © 2008 Columbia University Press www.gutenberg-e.org/yang 1 of 31 Between Winds and Clouds Bibliography Bin Yang Cao, Shuji. "Qingdai Beifang Chengshi Renkou Yanjiu" (Studies on urban populations in northern Qing China). Zhongguo Renkou Kexue, no. 4 (2001), 15-28. Cartier, Carolyn. "Origins and Evolution of a Geographical Idea." Modern China 28, no. 1 (2002), 79-143. Chakravarti, Ranabir. "Early Medieval Bengal and the Trade in Horses: A Note." Journal of Economic and Social History of the Orient 42:2 (1999), 194-211. Chapin, Helen B. "Yünnanese Images of Avalokitesvara." Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies, Vol. 2 (1944), 131-187. Chapin, Helen B., and Alexander C. Soper. "A Long Roll of Buddhist Images." Artibus Asiae, Vol. 32 (1970), 5-41, 157-199, 259-306, and Vol. 33 (1971), 75-142. Chang, K. C. The Archaeology of Ancient China. 4th ed. New Haven, Conn., and London: Yale University Press, 1986. Chen, Nan. "Tubo yu Nanzhao ji Erhezhuman Guanxi Congkao" (Studies of the relationship between Tibet, Nanzhao, and the Erhai barbarians). In Chen Nan, Zangshi Congkao (Studies of Tibetan history). Beijing: Minzu Chubanshe, 1998. Chen, Qian. "Chuandianmianyin Gudaokao" (On ancient routes among Sichuan, Yunnan, Burma, and India). Zhongguo Shehui Kexue (Social sciences in China), No.1, 161-180, 1981. Chen, Qingjiang. "Mingdai Yunnan Xianji Zhengqu Zhisuo de Chengchi" (Cities of department/ county level in Ming Yunnan). In Xi'nan Bianjiang Minzu Yanjiu (Ethnic studies of southwestern frontiers), Vol. 1. Kunming: Yunnan University Press, 2001, 447-467. Chen, Ruxing. "Zhubo Kao" (A study of Zhubo). Journal of Southeast Asian Researches, Vol. 6 (1970), 97-105. ------. "Shanguo Kao" (A study of Shan). Dalu Zazhi, Vol. 83, no. 4 (1991), 145-148. ------. "Guanyu 'Biayue,' 'Panyue,' yu 'Dianyue' de Kaoshi" (A scrutiny of "Baioyue," "Panyue," and "Dianyue"). Dalu Zizhi, Vol. 84, no. 5 (1992), 198-202. Chen, Shisong, ed. Sichuan Tongshi (History of Sichuan). Vol. 5. Chengdu: Sichuan Daxue Chubanshe, 1994. © 2008 Columbia University Press www.gutenberg-e.org/yang 2 of 31 Between Winds and Clouds Bibliography Bin Yang Chen, Yan. "Zhongmian Wenhua Jiaoliu Liangqiannian" (Two thousand years of Sino-Burmese cultural exchange). Zhongwai Wenhua Jiaoliushi (History of Sino-foreign cultural exchanges). Ed. Zhou Yiliang. Zhengzhou: He'nan Renmin Press, 1987, 1-41. Chen, Yinke. "Preface." In Chen Yuan, Mingji Dianqian Fojiao Kao (Buddhism in Yunnan and Guizhou at the end of the Ming dynasty). Beijing: The Catholic University of Beijing, 1940, 1- 2. ------. Tangdai Zhengzhi Zhidushi Shulungao (A draft of the political system in the Tang dynasty). Shanghai: Shanghai Guji Chubanshe, 1999. Chen, Yulong. Lidai Zhongyue Jiaotongdaoli Kao (Studies of Sino-Vietnamese routes). Kaifeng: Henan Renming Chubanshe, 1987. Cheng Meibao. Diyu Wenhua yu Guojia Rentong: Wanqing yilai Guangdongwenhuaguan de Xingcheng (Regional culture and national identification: The formation of concept of the Cantonese culture from the late Qing period). Beijing: Sanlian Shudian, 2006. Cheng, Xianmin, ed. Qing Shengxun Xi'nan Minzu Shiliao (Selected pieces of the Qing edicts on the southwestern ethnic peoples). Chengdu: Sichuandaxue Chubanshe, 1988. Christian, John L. "Trans-Burma Trade Routes to China." Pacific Affairs, Vol. 13, Issue 2 (June 1940), 173-191. Chuxiongfu Zhi (Gazetteer of Chuxiong prefecture), Kangxi edition (1716). Cooler, Richard M. The Karen Bronze Drums of Burma: Types, Iconography, Manufacture and Use. Leiden, New York, and Kolin: E.J. Brill, 1995. Crawford, Gary W. and Chen Shen. "The Origins of Rice Agriculture: Recent Progress in East Asia." Antiquity, Vol. 72, no. 278 (1998), 858-867. Creel, H. G. "The Role of Horse in Chinese History." American Historical Review 70.3 (1965), 647-72. Crossley, Pamela Kyle. "Thinking about Ethnicity in Early Modern China." Late Imperial China 11, no. (1990), 1-34. Dali Baizuzizhizhou Wanglingdiaochaketizu, ed. Ershi Shiji Dali Kaogu Wenji (Works on Dali archaeology in the twentieth century). Kunming: Yunnan Minzu Chubanshe, 2003. Dai, Yingcong. "The Rise of the Southwestern Frontier under the Qing 1640–1800." Ph.D. diss., University of Washington, Seattle, 1996. © 2008 Columbia University Press www.gutenberg-e.org/yang 3 of 31 Between Winds and Clouds Bibliography Bin Yang Davies, H. R. Yunnan: The Link between India and the Yangtze. New York: Paragon, 1970. Deng, Tingliang. "Chuyi Ruba Wangshu Shuo" (On the descendants of Chu entering the Ba and ruling the Shu). In Zhang Zhengming, ed. Chushi Luncong (Collected works on the Chu history). Wuhan: Hubei Renmin Chubanshe, 1984, 215-227. Dengchuanzhou Zhi (Gazetteer of Dengchuan department). 1853 edition, 12 vols. Deyell, John. "The China Connection: Problems of Silver Supply in Medieval Bengal." In Money and the Market in India 1100-1700, ed. Sanjay Subrahmanyam. Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1994, 112-136. Diamond, Norma. "Ethnicity and the State: The Hua Miao of Southwest China." In Ethnicity and the State, ed. Judith D. Toland. New Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction Publishers, 1995, 55-78. Dunstan, Helen. "Safely Supplying with the Devil: The Qing State and Its Merchant Suppliers of Copper." Late Imperial China 13.2 (Dec. 1992), 42-81. Editors. Dangdai Zhongguo Minzugongzuo Dashiji (Records of major events of Minzu works in contemporary China). Beijing: Minzu Chubanshe, 1989. Editors. Zhongguo Lishi Jinian Shouce (A handbook of Chinese history chronology). Beijing: Qixiang Chubanshe, 2002. Egami, Namio. "Migration of Cowrie-Shell Culture in East Asia." Acta Asiatica 26 (1974), 1-52. Elliott, Patricia. The White Umbrella. Bangkok: Post Publishing Public Company Limited, 1999. Elvin, Mark, Darren Crook, Shen Li, Richard Hones, and John Dearing. "The Impact of Clearance and Irrigation on the Environment in the Lake Erhai Catchment from the Ninth to the Nineteenth Century." East Asia History, no. 23 (June 2002), 1-60. Esherick, Joseph W. "Ten Theses on the Chinese Revolution." Modern China, Vol. 21, no. 1 (1995), 45-76. Fan, Wenlan. "Zi QinHan yilai Zhongguo Chengwei Guojia de Yuanyin" (Reasons for China being a minzu since the Qin-Han period). Lishi Yanjiu, 1954, 22-36. Fang, Guoyu. Yunnan Shiliao Mulu Gaishuo (A general introduction to sources on Yunnan). 3 Vols. Beijing: Zhonghuashuju, 1984. ------. Zhongguo Xi'nan Lishi Dili Kaoshi (Historical and geographical examinations of southwest China). Beijing: Zhonghua Shuju, 2 Vols. 1987. © 2008 Columbia University Press www.gutenberg-e.org/yang 4 of 31 Between Winds and Clouds Bibliography Bin Yang ------. "Yunnan yong Bei zuo Huobi de Shidai ji Bei de Laiyuan" (The date and source of cowry as currency in Yunnan). In Beibi Yanjiu (Studies on cowry currency), ed. Yang Shouchuan. Kunming: Yunnan University Press, 1997, 28-64. ------, ed. Yunnan Shiliao Congkan (The collection of Yunnan historical sources). 13 Vols. Kunming: Yunnan Daxue Chubanshe, 1998. ------. Works of Fang Guoyu. Ed. Lin Chaomin. Kunming: Yunnan Jiaoyu Chubanshe, 4 Vols, 2001. Fang, Guoyu, and Lin Chaomin. Makeboluo Xingji Yunnan Shidi Congkao (Historical and geographical studies of Marco Polo's travel in Yunnan). Kunming: Yunnan Minzu Chubanshe, 1994. Fang, Hao. Zhongxi Jiaotongshi (History of the East-West communications). Wuhan: Yuelushushe, 1987. Fang, Hui. "Cong Jinshiwenqi Kan Yuanming ji Qingchu Yunnan Shiyong Beibide Qingkuang"(Examining Yunnan cowry currency in the Yuan, Ming, and early Qing dynasties from metal and stone inscriptions and contracts). In Beibi Yanjiu (Studies on the cowry currency), ed. Yang Shouchuan. Kunming: Yunnan University Press, 1997a, 127-157. ------. "Guanyu Yuandai Yunnan de 'Zhenba' 'Siba' Wenti" (On the official cowry money and
Recommended publications
  • Chapter 5 Sinicization and Indigenization: the Emergence of the Yunnanese
    Between Winds and Clouds Bin Yang Chapter 5 Sinicization and Indigenization: The Emergence of the Yunnanese Introduction As the state began sending soldiers and their families, predominantly Han Chinese, to Yunnan, 1 the Ming military presence there became part of a project of colonization. Soldiers were joined by land-hungry farmers, exiled officials, and profit-driven merchants so that, by the end of the Ming period, the Han Chinese had become the largest ethnic population in Yunnan. Dramatically changing local demography, and consequently economic and cultural patterns, this massive and diverse influx laid the foundations for the social makeup of contemporary Yunnan. The interaction of the large numbers of Han immigrants with the indigenous peoples created a 2 new hybrid society, some members of which began to identify themselves as Yunnanese (yunnanren) for the first time. Previously, there had been no such concept of unity, since the indigenous peoples differentiated themselves by ethnicity or clan and tribal affiliations. This chapter will explore the process that led to this new identity and its reciprocal impact on the concept of Chineseness. Using primary sources, I will first introduce the indigenous peoples and their social customs 3 during the Yuan and early Ming period before the massive influx of Chinese immigrants. Second, I will review the migration waves during the Ming Dynasty and examine interactions between Han Chinese and the indigenous population. The giant and far-reaching impact of Han migrations on local society, or the process of sinicization, that has drawn a lot of scholarly attention, will be further examined here; the influence of the indigenous culture on Chinese migrants—a process that has won little attention—will also be scrutinized.
    [Show full text]
  • Your Paper's Title Starts Here
    International Conference on Education, Management and Computer Science (ICEMC 2016) Overview Research on the Text Sorting of Shanhai Jing Shuyan Yi1, a and Fan Yang1, b 1College of Humanities &Sciences of Northeast Normal University, Chang Chun, Jilin, China, 130117 [email protected], [email protected] Keywords: Guopu; Shanhai Jing; Text sorting; Literature review; Value. Abstract. Shanhai Jing is one of the most important ancient books in the pre- Qin period. Under the condition of the new era, this also has attracted the attention of the academia increasingly. Scholars have studied it from different angles. In the process of studying on Shanhai Jing‟s relevant text documents , the scholars were more from the following three aspects on the researching of Shanhai Jing: in the first place, the scholars discussed the value of Shanhai Jing form different subject areas; in the second place, some scholars discussed some fundamental researches on the subjects of Shanhai Jing‟s author, the property, the writing time and the content, in this process, they mainly focus on the angle of the real problems and the fantastic arguments; in the third place, the discussion area is researching on the current situations of Shanhai Jing. By combing the relevant academic achievements, not only can promote the academic understanding of Shanhai Jing in macroscopic aspect, but also can make a clear direction for further detailed interpretation of Shanhai Jing. Introduction Since published, Shanhai Jing has always been seen as a controversial book. Generally speaking, the ancients had mixed reviews on Shanhai Jing, The majority of which was denounced. While, under the social and cultural background of modern society, the status of Shanhai Jing has undergone earth-shaking changes, the scholars have become the research focus of Shanhai Jing In many fields.
    [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]
  • Historiography and Narratives of the Later Tang (923-936) and Later Jin (936-947) Dynasties in Tenth- to Eleventh- Century Sources
    Historiography and Narratives of the Later Tang (923-936) and Later Jin (936-947) Dynasties in Tenth- to Eleventh- century Sources Inauguraldissertation zur Erlangung des Doktorgrades der Philosophie an der Ludwig‐Maximilians‐Universität München vorgelegt von Maddalena Barenghi Aus Mailand 2014 Erstgutachter: Prof. Dr. Hans van Ess Zweitgutachter: Prof. Tiziana Lippiello Datum der mündlichen Prüfung: 31.03.2014 ABSTRACT Historiography and Narratives of the Later Tang (923-36) and Later Jin (936-47) Dynasties in Tenth- to Eleventh-century Sources Maddalena Barenghi This thesis deals with historical narratives of two of the Northern regimes of the tenth-century Five Dynasties period. By focusing on the history writing project commissioned by the Later Tang (923-936) court, it first aims at questioning how early-tenth-century contemporaries narrated some of the major events as they unfolded after the fall of the Tang (618-907). Second, it shows how both late- tenth-century historiographical agencies and eleventh-century historians perceived and enhanced these historical narratives. Through an analysis of selected cases the thesis attempts to show how, using the same source material, later historians enhanced early-tenth-century narratives in order to tell different stories. The five cases examined offer fertile ground for inquiry into how the different sources dealt with narratives on the rise and fall of the Shatuo Later Tang and Later Jin (936- 947). It will be argued that divergent narrative details are employed both to depict in different ways the characters involved and to establish hierarchies among the historical agents. Table of Contents List of Rulers ............................................................................................................ ii Aknowledgements ..................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Jingjiao Under the Lenses of Chinese Political Theology
    religions Article Jingjiao under the Lenses of Chinese Political Theology Chin Ken-pa Department of Philosophy, Fu Jen Catholic University, New Taipei City 24205, Taiwan; [email protected] Received: 28 May 2019; Accepted: 16 September 2019; Published: 26 September 2019 Abstract: Conflict between religion and state politics is a persistent phenomenon in human history. Hence it is not surprising that the propagation of Christianity often faces the challenge of “political theology”. When the Church of the East monk Aluoben reached China in 635 during the reign of Emperor Tang Taizong, he received the favorable invitation of the emperor to translate Christian sacred texts for the collections of Tang Imperial Library. This marks the beginning of Jingjiao (oY) mission in China. In historiographical sense, China has always been a political domineering society where the role of religion is subservient and secondary. A school of scholarship in Jingjiao studies holds that the fall of Jingjiao in China is the obvious result of its over-involvement in local politics. The flaw of such an assumption is the overlooking of the fact that in the Tang context, it is impossible for any religious establishments to avoid getting in touch with the Tang government. In the light of this notion, this article attempts to approach this issue from the perspective of “political theology” and argues that instead of over-involvement, it is rather the clashing of “ideologies” between the Jingjiao establishment and the ever-changing Tang court’s policies towards foreigners and religious bodies that caused the downfall of Jingjiao Christianity in China. This article will posit its argument based on the analysis of the Chinese Jingjiao canonical texts, especially the Xian Stele, and takes this as a point of departure to observe the political dynamics between Jingjiao and Tang court.
    [Show full text]
  • Julian WARD, Xu Xiake (1587-1641): the Art of Travel Writing , Richmond, Surrey, U.K.: Curzon Press, 2001
    REVIEWS Julian WARD, Xu Xiake (1587-1641): The Art of Travel Writing , Richmond, Surrey, U.K.: Curzon Press, 2001. 231, xviii pp. ISBN 0-7007-1319-0. On October 17, 1636, Xu Xiake, then almost fty years old, left his family in Jiangyin (in present-day Jiangsu province) and embarked on what would be his last and, by far, most challenging expedition. Accompanied by a Buddhist monk and two servants (one of whom would abandon the party just a fortnight into the journey), Xu would eventually spend nearly four years on the road, traveling through the provinces of Zhejiang, Jiangxi, Huguang, Guangxi, Guizhou, and Yunnan as well as seeking out and exploring sites both famous and out of the ordinary. Life on the road was as invigorating as it was hazardous. During the journey, as Ward notes, ÒXu was robbed three times, ran out of money and was nally deserted by his remaining servantÓ (p. 43). Xu Xiake was of course not the rst Ming-dynasty literatus to have traveled extensively in southwest China; quite a few had gone before him, though, unlike Xu, almost all had done so in the capacity either as o cials or as political exiles. What sets Xu apart from his con- temporaries is not just his desire for travel; during his long and arduous journey, Xu man- aged to keep a detailed record of most of the notable places he had visited (judging from the editions still extant, Xu must have written, on average, 500 characters per day for nearly 1,100 consecutive days).
    [Show full text]
  • Hang Tu 涂航 2 Peabody Terrace, #1703, Cambridge, MA, 02138 Email: [email protected] Phone: +1-443-345-6628 Education: H
    Hang Tu 涂航 2 Peabody Terrace, #1703, Cambridge, MA, 02138 Email: [email protected] Phone: +1-443-345-6628 Education: Harvard University 2015-Present East Asian Languages & Civilizations Ph.D. University of Washington June 2014 English Language and Literature M.A. Sun Yat-Sen University July 2012 English Language and Literature B.A. Dissertation: “Revolution Remains: Literature, Thought, and Memory Politics in Contemporary China” Committee: Professor David Der-wei Wang (Chair), Professor Elizabeth J. Perry, Professor Jie Li Publications: Book Chapters: “Cultural Imperialism Redux? Reassessing the Christian Colleges of Republican China,” co- authored with Elizabeth J. Perry, in China and the World—The World and China: A Transcultural Perspective, Vol. 3 (Gossenberg: OSTASIEN Verlag, 2019). “Anticipatory Utopia and Redemptive Utopia in Post-revolutionary China,” in Utopia and Utopianism in the Contemporary Chinese Context: Texts, Ideas, Spaces, David Der-wei Wang eds. (Hong Kong University Press, forthcoming). English Journal Articles: “Pleasure and Sin, Li Zehou, Liu Zaifu, and the Political-Theological Motif in Post-Mao Cultural Reflections,” in Prism: Theory and Modern Chinese Literature, accepted. Chinese Journal Articles: “Le yu zui: Li Zehou, Liu Zaifu, yu wenhuafansi de liangzhonglujing” 樂與罪:李澤厚, 劉 再復, 與文化反思的兩種路徑” [Pleasure and sin: Li Zehou, Liu Zaifu, and the two routes of cultural reflection in post-Mao China], in Huawenwenxue 華文文學 [Sinophone Literature], Feb. 2019. (Peer-reviewed) “Meiyu dai zongjiao: houwusi shidai de meixue sichao” 美育代宗教:后五四時代的美學 思潮 [An aesthetic education with religious sentiments: notes on a political-theological motif in post-May Fourth aesthetics], in Nanfangwentan 南方文壇 [Southern Forum], Jan. 2019. (Peer-reviewed) “Huidao kangde: Li Zehou yu bashiniandai de qimeng sichao” 回到康德:李澤厚與八十 年代的啟蒙思潮 [Back to Kant: Li Zehou and the question of enlightenment in post-Mao China], in Sixiang 思想雜誌 [Reflexion] , Dec.
    [Show full text]
  • CES 2012 Conference Program
    CES 2012 Conference “Development beyond the Middle Income Trap: China in Transition” Kaifeng, China June 23-25 Program Outline June 23 Event June 24 Event June 25 08:30- Opening Ceremony 9:00 Continuing 09:00- Education Group Photo 09:15 Program Plenary Session: Keynote Plenary Session: Keynote & 09:15- 09:00- Address I Address II Sightseeing 11:15 11:00 (Mortensen, Woo) (Heckman, O’Brien) Tours 11:15- 11:00- Tea Break Tea Break 11:30 11:15 11:30- Roundtable Forum I & 11:15- Roundtable Forum III & 13:00 Parallel Sessions (E1-E6) 12:45 Parallel Sessions (E19-E24) 13:00- 12:45- Lunch Lunch 14:30 14:15 14:30- Roundtable Forum II & 14:30- Roundtable Forum IV & 16:00 Parallel Sessions (E7-E12) 16:00 Parallel Sessions (E25-E30) 16:00- 16:00- Tea Break Tea Break 16:15 16:15 Plenary Session: 16:15- Parallel Sessions 16:15- Guest Speeches 17:45 (E13-E18) 17:45 Closing Ceremony 18:00- 18:00- Welcome Dinner Farewell Dinner 20:30 20:30 Note: All sessions in this program will be conducted in English unless otherwise indicated. Parallel sessions conducted in Chinese are organized by Henan University and will be announced later. Session venues will be provided and updated in a later version of the program. 1 PROGRAM OF SESSIONS (Tentative, updated on April 18, 2012) June 22 (Friday) 09:00 – 23:00 Arrival and Registration Venue: New Century Grand Hotel, Kaifeng 18:00-19:30 Buffet Dinner June 23 (Saturday) 08:30 – 09:00 Opening Ceremony Chair: Mingzhai Geng, Dean of School of Economics, Henan University Speakers: Chancellor of Henan University, CES
    [Show full text]
  • Historical Geography and Environmental History in China Zhaoqing Han
    Han Journal of Chinese Studies (2016) 1:4 Journal of Chinese Studies DOI 10.1186/s40853-016-0002-z RESEARCHARTICLE Open Access Historical geography and environmental history in China Zhaoqing Han Correspondence: [email protected] Abstract Center for Historical Geographic “ Studies, Fudan University, 220 This paper was originally prepared for a roundtable on Chinese Environmental Handan Road, Shanghai 200433, History: Current Research and Future Prospects” at the Eighth International China Convention of Asia Scholars. This is a large and complex topic covering a broad range of disciplines. Except for those publications which clearly marked their titles as “environmental history,” it is difficult for us to classify which is indeed a study of “environmental history,” let alone provide a comprehensive summary of the current research of Chinese environmental history. However, I would like to share with you my view on this topic from the perspective of historical geography. This paper consists of the current research of Chinese environmental history, its relationship with Chinese historical geography and my view on its future prospects. Keywords: Environmental history, Historical geography, Relation, Future prospects Background This paper was originally prepared for a roundtable on “Chinese Environmental History: Current Research and Future Prospects” at the Eighth International Convention of Asia Scholars. This is a large and complex topic covering a broad range of disciplines. Except for those publications which clearly marked their titles as “environmental history,” it is difficult for us to classify which is indeed a study of “environmental history,” let alone provide a comprehensive summary of the current research of Chinese environmental history.
    [Show full text]
  • Language Management in the People's Republic of China
    LANGUAGE AND PUBLIC POLICY Language management in the People’s Republic of China Bernard Spolsky Bar-Ilan University Since the establishment of the People’s Republic of China in 1949, language management has been a central activity of the party and government, interrupted during the years of the Cultural Revolution. It has focused on the spread of Putonghua as a national language, the simplification of the script, and the auxiliary use of Pinyin. Associated has been a policy of modernization and ter - minological development. There have been studies of bilingualism and topolects (regional vari - eties like Cantonese and Hokkien) and some recognition and varied implementation of the needs of non -Han minority languages and dialects, including script development and modernization. As - serting the status of Chinese in a globalizing world, a major campaign of language diffusion has led to the establishment of Confucius Institutes all over the world. Within China, there have been significant efforts in foreign language education, at first stressing Russian but now covering a wide range of languages, though with a growing emphasis on English. Despite the size of the country, the complexity of its language situations, and the tension between competing goals, there has been progress with these language -management tasks. At the same time, nonlinguistic forces have shown even more substantial results. Computers are adding to the challenge of maintaining even the simplified character writing system. As even more striking evidence of the effect of poli - tics and demography on language policy, the enormous internal rural -to -urban rate of migration promises to have more influence on weakening regional and minority varieties than campaigns to spread Putonghua.
    [Show full text]
  • The Road to Literary Culture: Revisiting the Jurchen Language Examination System*
    T’OUNG PAO 130 T’oung PaoXin 101-1-3 Wen (2015) 130-167 www.brill.com/tpao The Road to Literary Culture: Revisiting the Jurchen Language Examination System* Xin Wen (Harvard University) Abstract This essay contextualizes the unique institution of the Jurchen language examination system in the creation of a new literary culture in the Jin dynasty (1115–1234). Unlike the civil examinations in Chinese, which rested on a well-established classical canon, the Jurchen language examinations developed in close connection with the establishment of a Jurchen school system and the formation of a literary canon in the Jurchen language and scripts. In addition to being an official selection mechanism, the Jurchen examinations were more importantly part of a literary endeavor toward a cultural ideal. Through complementing transmitted Chinese sources with epigraphic sources in Jurchen, this essay questions the conventional view of this institution as a “Jurchenization” measure, and proposes that what the Jurchen emperors and officials envisioned was a road leading not to Jurchenization, but to a distinctively hybrid literary culture. Résumé Cet article replace l’institution unique des examens en langue Jurchen dans le contexte de la création d’une nouvelle culture littéraire sous la dynastie des Jin (1115–1234). Contrairement aux examens civils en chinois, qui s’appuyaient sur un canon classique bien établi, les examens en Jurchen se sont développés en rapport étroit avec la mise en place d’un système d’écoles Jurchen et avec la formation d’un canon littéraire en langue et en écriture Jurchen. En plus de servir à la sélection des fonctionnaires, et de façon plus importante, les examens en Jurchen s’inscrivaient * This article originated from Professor Peter Bol’s seminar at Harvard University.
    [Show full text]
  • A Visualization Quality Evaluation Method for Multiple Sequence Alignments
    2011 5th International Conference on Bioinformatics and Biomedical Engineering (iCBBE 2011) Wuhan, China 10 - 12 May 2011 Pages 1 - 867 IEEE Catalog Number: CFP1129C-PRT ISBN: 978-1-4244-5088-6 1/7 TABLE OF CONTENTS ALGORITHMS, MODELS, SOFTWARE AND TOOLS IN BIOINFORMATICS: A Visualization Quality Evaluation Method for Multiple Sequence Alignments ............................................................1 Hongbin Lee, Bo Wang, Xiaoming Wu, Yonggang Liu, Wei Gao, Huili Li, Xu Wang, Feng He A New Promoter Recognition Method Based On Features Optimal Selection.................................................................5 Lan Tao, Huakui Chen, Yanmeng Xu, Zexuan Zhu A Center Closeness Algorithm For The Analyses Of Gene Expression Data ...................................................................9 Huakun Wang, Lixin Feng, Zhou Ying, Zhang Xu, Zhenzhen Wang A Novel Method For Lysine Acetylation Sites Prediction ................................................................................................ 11 Yongchun Gao, Wei Chen Weighted Maximum Margin Criterion Method: Application To Proteomic Peptide Profile ....................................... 15 Xiao Li Yang, Qiong He, Si Ya Yang, Li Liu Ectopic Expression Of Tim-3 Induces Tumor-Specific Antitumor Immunity................................................................ 19 Osama A. O. Elhag, Xiaojing Hu, Weiying Zhang, Li Xiong, Yongze Yuan, Lingfeng Deng, Deli Liu, Yingle Liu, Hui Geng Small-World Network Properties Of Protein Complexes: Node Centrality And Community Structure
    [Show full text]