International Symposium on Material, Energy And

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

International Symposium on Material, Energy And International Symposium on Material, Energy and Environment Engineering 2015 (ISM3E 2015) Advances in Engineering Research Volume 46 Changsha, China 28 – 29 November 2015 Editor: L. Xie ISBN: 978-1-5108-1802-6 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. Copyright© (2015) by Atlantis Press All rights reserved. http://www.atlantis-press.com/php/pub.php?publication=ism3e-15 Printed by Curran Associates, Inc. (2016) 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: 845-758-2634 Email: [email protected] Web: www.proceedings.com TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. MATERIALS SCIENCE RESEARCH ADVANCE IN THE USE OF CATALYSTS FOR SLUDGE PYROLYSIS..............................................1 Yang Xu, Guori Dong, Fang Chen, Hongyong Li, Jibin Wang THE RESEARCH PROGRESS ON THE SYNTHESIS AND APPLICATION OF MICROPOROUS COORDINATION POLYMERS .........................................................................................................................................5 Yan Qin, Yu Xiao, Pu Huang, Yun Zhu, Ming Yi ANALYSIS AND RESEARCH ON MINERAL HYPERSPECTRAL FEATURES........................................................9 Wei Wang, Jinlin Wang, Kefa Zhou, Zhixin Zhang, Shuguang Zhou, Sihui Duxi, Mengjuan Wu STUDY ON THE PREPARATION TECHNOLOGY OF SINX THIN FILM BY PECVD .......................................... 13 Huawei Xu, Zhiyuan He, Qingli Huang, Dongxiang Luo, Jianyao Hu, Linyong Fan EFFECT OF BALL MILLING ON THE ELECTROCHEMICAL PROPERTIES OF LA0.7(MG0.25TI0.05)(NI0.85CO0.15)3.5 HYDROGEN STORAGE ALLOY .......................................................................... 16 Shujun Qiu, Xingyu Ma, Errui Wang, Jianling Huang, Hailiang Chu, Yongjin Zou, Cuili Xiang, Fen Xu, Lixian Sun STUDIES ON THE DETERMINATION OF FORMALDEHYDE IN SQUID AND BUMMALO ............................. 20 Xuan Zhang, Xiaosheng Shen, Yun Hua Hui, Cong Kong, Yuan Wang, Bing Feng, Youqiong Cai, Dongmei Huang ULTRASOUND-ASSISTED EXTRACTION FOR SOLUBLE ANTIMONY(III) AND ANTIMONY(V) SPECIATION IN LEIGONGTENG BY HYDRIDE GENERATION INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA ATOMIC EMISSION SPECTROMETRY .................................................... 23 Jinrong Feng NUMERICAL SIMULATION ON THE IMPACT DAMAGE OF CFRP LAMINATES WITH DIFFERENT POROSITIES............................................................................................................................................... 27 Aying Zhang, Dongxing Zhang, Mingzhe Qu, Kai Yu THE IMPACT DAMAGE AND MEDIUM LEAKAGE OF CFRP LAMINATES WITH DIFFERENT THICKNESS........................................................................................................................................................................ 31 Aying Zhang, Dongxing Zhang, Mingzhe Qu, Kai Yu RESEARCH ON THE DAMAGE ASSESSMENT OF CARBON/EPOXY COMPOSITE LAMINATES AT DIFFERENT IMPACT ENERGY...................................................................................................... 35 Aying Zhang, Haibao Lu THE CONTROLLABLE SYNTHESIS OF SILVER NANOWIRES BY USING THE POLYOL METHOD WITH TRACE AGENT................................................................................................................................... 39 Hongli Guo, Guangjian Xing, Zhixin Yang TRANSPARENT ELECTRODES FABRICATED VIA GRAPHENE AND SILVER NANOWIRE HYBRID FILMS.................................................................................................................................................................. 43 Zhixin Yang, Ang Zuo, Hongli Guo, Guangjian Xing DEVELOPMENT FEATURES AND FRACTAL RESEARCH OF FOLD STRUCTURE OF NO.5 COAL SEAM IN CHENGHE-SECOND COAL MINE................................................................................................... 47 Zhipei Zhang, Yi Cheng, Jia Wang, Xingyu Wang APPLICATION OF SCS-CN MODEL IN RUNOFF ESTIMATION ............................................................................ 50 Dake Wang, Liangqiong Qin, Bao Chang, Mingxing Wang, Weihua Zhang GRAPHENE-WRAPPED FE3O4 ANODE MATERIAL FOR HIGH-PERFORMANCE LITHIUM ION BATTERIES................................................................................................................................................................ 55 Yu Jiang, Zhongjie Jiang, Meilin Liu NATURAL FIBER THERMAL INSULATION MATERIALS FROM FIRE PREVENTION POINT OF VIEW ............................................................................................................................................................................. 58 Linda Makovická Osvaldová, Stanislava Gašpercová, Martin Petho PREPARATION AND PROPERTIES OF A COMPOSITE GRINDING AID FOR STEEL SLAG AND GRANULATED BLAST FURNACE SLAG ........................................................................................................... 61 Mimi Chen, Fengqing Zhao, Tielin Fan PREPARATION OF MULTI NITRATE MOLTEN SALT AND ITS PROPERTIES TESTS.................................... 64 Wei Zhai, Bo Yang, Maodong Li, Shiping Li, Mingliang Xin, Jinmei Lin, Lian Wang TEMPLATE-FREE HYDROTHERMAL SYNTHESIS OF NANOROD (RUTI)O2 COMPOSITE CATHODE FOR HYDROGEN EVOLUTION IN ALKALI SOLUTION .................................................................... 69 Kun Xiong, Lin Zhou, Xianming Zhang, Xiaoshu Lv, Guangming Jiang THE EFFECT OF PRECIPITANTS ON CE-LA SOLID SOLUTION PREPARED FROM MIXED RARE EARTH CHLORIDE BY A CO-PRECIPITATION METHOD......................................................................... 73 Xue Han, Hongrui Hao, Ronggui Guo STUDY ON PREPARATION AND STABILITY OF SULTAMICILLIN TOSILATE-ß- CYCLODEXTRIN .............................................................................................................................................................. 77 Xiangqun Xu, Yihui Ping, Jian Xiong, Lin Cheng PREPARATION OF LINCOMYCIN-ß-CYCLODEXTRIN COMPLEX BY ULTRASONIC METHOD............................................................................................................................................................................. 81 Xiangqun Xu, Jie Yang, Youquan Zhong, Huayu Wang, Nian Hong, Lin Cheng CARBON NANOTUBE NETWORK STRUCTURE INDUCED SHAPE MEMORY BEHAVIOR CHANGES OF LIQUID CRYSTALLINE POLYURETHANE...................................................................................... 85 Yueting Li, Huiqin Lian, Wei Chang, Benzhe Wu, Yupeng Liu, Junlin Ma, Junwei Ma, Jierui Wang EXPLORATION OF THE POSSIBILITY OF IONIC POLYURETHANE USED AS IPMC SUBSTRATE ....................................................................................................................................................................... 89 Yanou Hu, Huiqin Lian, Yueting Li, Wei Chang EFFECTS OF OIL SPILL ON ACTIVITIES OF ENZYMES( SOD, GOT AND AHH) IN THE SHRIMP PENAEUS VANNAMEI..................................................................................................................................... 93 Hongwei Wang, Fang Cai, Chunlong Zhao, Yaping Ma, Jing Mei Liu, Yu Fan MOLECULAR DYNAMICS SIMULATION ON THE SEPARATION OF ETHANOL/WATER IN THE NEW 6FDA/MODMS MEMBRANES ..................................................................................................................... 97 Wei Zhao, Wensheng Deng, Zhipeng Zhao, Miyi Li, Zhiping Zhao ADSORPTION OF CO ON M-DOPED(M = CA, CE AND PR) MONOCLINIC ZIRCONIA(111) SURFACE: A FIRST-PRINCIPLES STUDY................................................................................................................. 101 Hongchun Luo, Chunhua Zeng, Dong Tian, Hua Wang, Yunchang Fu EFFECTS OF NONYLPHENOL ON EXPRESSION LEVELS OF GNRH-LIKE POLYPEPTIDE IN CIPANGOPALUDINA CHINENSIS............................................................................................................................... 106 Hongwei Wang, Fang Cai, Xiang Liu, Guang Wang, Yuan Na Wu, Yiwei Liu, Amena Hasan THE EFFECTS OF ROXITHROMYCIN ON THE ACTIVITY OF APND AND GST IN CIPANGOPALUDINA CHINENSIS............................................................................................................................... 110 Hongwei Wang, Duanbo Cai, Yiwei Liu, Wen Zhao, Fang Cai, Yapeng Ren, Ze Zhong Li EXPERIMENTAL STUDY ON THE SINGLE FACTOR OF HYDROGEN PEROXIDE FOR THE DEGRADATION OF ANILINE ...................................................................................................................................... 114 Yongguang Bi, Minxia Huang, Shiting Deng, Hong Yu, Xue Wei Chen, Xuemei Liu, Hai Lan Huang EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH ON SINGLE FACTOR ENZYMATIC EXTRACTION POLYSACCHARIDE BARLEY...................................................................................................................................... 117 Yongguang Bi, Yumin Li OPTIMIZATION OF ENZYMATIC EXTRACTION BARLEY POLYSACCHARIDES ORTHOGONAL TEST METHOD.................................................................................................................................. 121 Yongguang Bi, Yumin Li EXTRACTION OF TOTAL POLYPHENOLS KELP OPTIMIZATION TEST........................................................ 125 Zhong Wang, Yongguang Bi, Xuewei Chen, Xuemei Liu, Hai Lan Huang STUDY ON FILM DRIP IRRIGATION OF MAIZE TO DYNAMIC CHANGES OF SOIL TEMPERATURE .............................................................................................................................................................
Recommended publications
  • Cambridge University Press 978-1-108-47926-4 — Rumor in the Early Chinese Empires Zongli Lu Index More Information
    Cambridge University Press 978-1-108-47926-4 — Rumor in the Early Chinese Empires Zongli Lu Index More Information Index abnormal/abnormalities The Blue Sky is dead; the Yellow Sky will decorations and writings, 201 stand, 84–85, 170, 289, 293, 309 disasters, 20–21, 31 Bo, Lady (Empress Dowager), 247–248 heading west, 35 Book of Changes, 50, 68, 103–105 physical characteristics, 181 Book of Documents,8–9, 11, 58, 118, 295 as portentous, 46–52 Book of Great Peace, with Green Headings,84 speech characteristics, 106, 286 Book of Odes, 17, 25–26, 58, 111 of state’s governance, 106 supernatural entities, 293–294 Cai Shu, 9, 11–16, 18, 43 weather, 217 Cai Yong, 85, 166 acceptance (of the people/by the people), Calendar of the Heavenly Official Scripture of 17–23, 283, 291 Great Peace with the Embodiment of the Accounts Clerks, 156, 302 Origin,79–84, 177–178 Ai, Emperor. see Liu Xin Cao Cao, 167–168, 214 Ai Zhang, 183–184, 188 Cao San, 112, 121–122 air currents, 173–176, 215, 217, 249–250, 252, central government supervision mechanism, 260–267, 290, 315 145–150 Allport, Gordon W., vii–viii, 306 Chao Fulin, 171 alternative historical truths, xii Chen Dan, 167–168 An, Emperor. see Liu Hu Chen Fan, 31, 226 apocryphal-prophetic texts. see chen Chen Hsueh-Ping, 8 prophecies Chen Jun, 158 archaic history, 279–281 Chen Ping, 89, 127 aristocratic gossip, 2 chen prophecies authorities’ response to portentous talk, 87, auto-suggestive, 45, 170 318–319 belief in, 206–218 coded chen prophecies, 190–195 Bai Juyi, 14 curses and, 185–186 Ban Biao, 205 defined,
    [Show full text]
  • The Birth of Chinese Feminism Columbia & Ko, Eds
    & liu e-yin zHen (1886–1920?) was a theo- ko Hrist who figured centrally in the birth , karl of Chinese feminism. Unlike her contem- , poraries, she was concerned less with China’s eds fate as a nation and more with the relation- . , ship among patriarchy, imperialism, capi- talism, and gender subjugation as global historical problems. This volume, the first translation and study of He-Yin’s work in English, critically reconstructs early twenti- eth-century Chinese feminist thought in a transnational context by juxtaposing He-Yin The Bir Zhen’s writing against works by two better- known male interlocutors of her time. The editors begin with a detailed analysis of He-Yin Zhen’s life and thought. They then present annotated translations of six of her major essays, as well as two foundational “The Birth of Chinese Feminism not only sheds light T on the unique vision of a remarkable turn-of- tracts by her male contemporaries, Jin h of Chinese the century radical thinker but also, in so Tianhe (1874–1947) and Liang Qichao doing, provides a fresh lens through which to (1873–1929), to which He-Yin’s work examine one of the most fascinating and com- responds and with which it engages. Jin, a poet and educator, and Liang, a philosopher e plex junctures in modern Chinese history.” Theory in Transnational ssential Texts Amy— Dooling, author of Women’s Literary and journalist, understood feminism as a Feminism in Twentieth-Century China paternalistic cause that liberals like them- selves should defend. He-Yin presents an “This magnificent volume opens up a past and alternative conception that draws upon anar- conjures a future.
    [Show full text]
  • On Computer Distributed Control and Intelligent Enviromental Monitoring CDCIEM 2012 Table of Contents
    2012 International Conference on Computer Distributed Control and Intelligent Enviromental Monitoring CDCIEM 2012 Table of Contents Preface......................................................................................................................................................................xviii Conference Committees.........................................................................................................................................xix Reviewers....................................................................................................................................................................xx 2012 International Conference on Computer Distributed Control and Intelligent Enviromental Monitoring 1-Wire Search Algorithm and its Application ................................................................................................................1 Yu Gui A Novel Cost-Effective Portable Electronic Nose for Indoor-/In-Car Air Quality Monitoring ......................................................................................................................................................................4 F.C. Tian, C. Kadri, L. Zhang, J.W. Feng, L.H. Juan, and P.L. Na A Clustering Routing Algorithm Based on Energy and Distance in WSN ....................................................................9 Jia Yunjie, Liu Ming, Zhu Song, and Dong Pengtao A Distributed Video Monitoring Terminal Based on DaVinci DSP ............................................................................13
    [Show full text]
  • Staff and Students
    KIB STAFF AND STUDENTS HAN Min CHEN Shao-Tian WANG Ying JI Yun-Heng Director: XUAN Yu CHEN Wen-Yun LI De-Zhu DUAN Jun-Hong GU Shuang-Hua The Herbarium Deputy Directors: PENG Hua (Curator) SUN Hang Sci. & Tech. Information Center LEI Li-Gong YANG Yong-Ping WANG Li-Song ZHOU Bing (Chief Executive) LIU Ji-Kai LI Xue-Dong LIU Ai-Qin GAN Fan-Yuan WANG Jing-Hua ZHOU Yi-Lan Director Emeritus: ZHANG Yan DU Ning WU Zheng-Yi WANG Ling HE Yan-Biao XIANG Jian-Ying HE Yun-Cheng General Administrative Offi ce LIU En-De YANG Qian GAN Fan-Yuan (Head, concurrent WU Xi-Lin post) ZHOU Hong-Xia QIAN Jie (Deputy Head) Biogeography and Ecology XIONG De-Hua Department Other Members ZHAO JI-Dong Head: ZHOU Zhe-Kun SHUI Yu-Min TIAN Zhi-Duan Deputy Head: PENG Hua YANG Shi-Xiong HUANG Lu-Lu HU Yun-Qian WU Yan CAS Key Laboratory of Biodiversity CHEN Wen-Hong CHEN Xing-Cai (Retired Apr. 2006) and Biogeography YANG Xue ZHANG Yi Director: SUN Hang (concurrent post) SU Yong-Ge (Retired Apr. 2006) Executive Director: ZHOU Zhe-Kun CAI Jie Division of Human Resources, Innovation Base Consultant: WU Master' s Students Zheng-Yi CPC & Education Affairs FANG Wei YANG Yun-Shan (secretary) WU Shu-Guang (Head) REN Zong-Xin LI Ying LI De-Zhu' s Group LIU Jie ZENG Yan-Mei LI De-Zhu ZHANG Yu-Xiao YIN Wen WANG Hong YU Wen-Bin LI Jiang-Wei YANG Jun-Bo AI Hong-Lian WU Shao-Bo XUE Chun-Ying ZHANG Shu PU Ying-Dong GAO Lian-Ming ZHOU Wei HE Hai-Yan LU Jin-Mei DENG Xiao-Juan HUA Hong-Ying TIAN Xiao-Fei LIU Pei-Gui' s Group LIANG Wen-Xing XIAO Yue-Qin LIU Pei-Gui QIAO Qin ZHANG Chang-Qin Division of Science and TIAN Wei WANG Xiang-Hua Development MA Yong-Peng YU Fu-Qiang WANG Yu-Hua (Head) SHEN Min WANG Yun LI Zhi-Jian ZHU Wei-Dong MA Xiao-Qing SUN Hang' s Group NIU Yang YUE Yuan-Zheng SUN Hang YUE Liang-Liang LI Xiao-Xian NIE Ze-Long LI Yan-Chun TIAN Ning YUE Ji-Pei FENG Bang NI Jing-Yun ZHA Hong-Guang XIA Ke HU Guo-Wen (Retired Jun.
    [Show full text]
  • Rethinking Chinese Kinship in the Han and the Six Dynasties: a Preliminary Observation
    part 1 volume xxiii • academia sinica • taiwan • 2010 INSTITUTE OF HISTORY AND PHILOLOGY third series asia major • third series • volume xxiii • part 1 • 2010 rethinking chinese kinship hou xudong 侯旭東 translated and edited by howard l. goodman Rethinking Chinese Kinship in the Han and the Six Dynasties: A Preliminary Observation n the eyes of most sinologists and Chinese scholars generally, even I most everyday Chinese, the dominant social organization during imperial China was patrilineal descent groups (often called PDG; and in Chinese usually “zongzu 宗族”),1 whatever the regional differences between south and north China. Particularly after the systematization of Maurice Freedman in the 1950s and 1960s, this view, as a stereo- type concerning China, has greatly affected the West’s understanding of the Chinese past. Meanwhile, most Chinese also wear the same PDG- focused glasses, even if the background from which they arrive at this view differs from the West’s. Recently like Patricia B. Ebrey, P. Steven Sangren, and James L. Watson have tried to challenge the prevailing idea from diverse perspectives.2 Some have proven that PDG proper did not appear until the Song era (in other words, about the eleventh century). Although they have confirmed that PDG was a somewhat later institution, the actual underlying view remains the same as before. Ebrey and Watson, for example, indicate: “Many basic kinship prin- ciples and practices continued with only minor changes from the Han through the Ch’ing dynasties.”3 In other words, they assume a certain continuity of paternally linked descent before and after the Song, and insist that the Chinese possessed such a tradition at least from the Han 1 This article will use both “PDG” and “zongzu” rather than try to formalize one term or one English translation.
    [Show full text]
  • An Analysis of Chinese Talent Management Strategy: Emphasis on Cao Cao’S Competencies from the Records of the Three Kingdoms
    AN ANALYSIS OF CHINESE TALENT MANAGEMENT STRATEGY: EMPHASIS ON CAO CAO’S COMPETENCIES FROM THE RECORDS OF THE THREE KINGDOMS LU KUICHENG A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN HUMAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT OF INTERNATIONAL GRADUATE STUDIES IN HUMAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT FACULTY OF EDUCATION BURAPHA UNIVERSITY MAY 2018 COPYRIGHT OF BURAPHA UNIVERSITY ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I wish to express my sincere gratitude to the many people who supported and helped me in the completion of this study. For my worthily principle advisor Associate Professor Dr.Chalong Tubsree, I send my heartfelt thanks for his patience and guidance in helping me. In the process of composing this paper, he gave me much academic and constructive advice, and helped me to correct my paper. Without his enlightening instruction, impressive kindness and patience, I could not have completed my thesis. His keen and vigorous academic observation enlightened me not only in this thesis but also in my future study. At the same time, I would like to express my appreciation to my Co-advisor, who gave me useful literature knowledge and information in this paper. She is Assist. Prof. Dr. Wilai Limthawaranun. I am very grateful for her patient guidance in the course of my thesis writing. Finally, I would like to thank the teachers who helped me during my entire study process in the International Graduate Studies Human Resource Development Center of Burapha University. Dr. Watunyoo Suwannaset, Dr. Chalermsri Chantarathong and Rattanasiri Khemraj in the IG-HRD office, thank you for taking care of me meticulously for the last three years.
    [Show full text]
  • In 212 AD, As the Army of the Great Warlord Cao Cao 曹操 Was Moving South Against His Southern Rival Sun Quan 孫權, There Was a Sad Incident in the Camp
    A QUESTION OF LOYALTY XUN YU, CAO CAO AND SIMA GUANG In 212 AD, as the army of the great warlord Cao Cao 曹操 was moving south against his southern rival Sun Quan 孫權, there was a sad incident in the camp. Xun Yu 荀彧, a leading counsellor and one of Cao Cao's oldest supporters, died at Shouchun 壽春 city on the Huai 淮 River. There are varying accounts and opinions whether he died of natural causes or whether he killed himself, but Cao Cao was embarrassed and Emperor Xian of Han 漢獻帝, though close-held under his control, made a point of mourning Xun Yu. Nine hundred years later, moreover, as Sima Guang 司馬光 of the Northern Song dynasty compiled his chronicle Zizhi tongjian 資治通鑑, he took the death of Xun Yu as the occasion for a powerful essay on proper conduct in troubled times. The story of Xun Yu and Cao Cao, therefore, not only touches the tensions of loyalty and legitimacy between a falling dynasty and a rising power, it provided one of China's greatest Confucianists with a case-study for his moral teaching.1 [31] For two and a half thousand years since the time of Confucius, as rival states and succeeding dynasties have ruled in China, many men in public affairs have been forced into cruel choices of allegiance, and have been expected to maintain personal honour even at the cost of their lives. There has always been conflict in the Confucian tradition between an individual's responsibility to private personal and family affairs when they are set against public loyalty to the state and its government.
    [Show full text]
  • End of an Empire (185–189)
    418 Chapter 9 Chapter 9 End of an Empire (185–189) Chronology The Loss of Liang Province Imperial Extravagance Imperial Succession Slaughter in the Palace A Note on the Dates of the Crisis Dong Zhuo Ruin of a Capital The End of Han Chronology 184 [rebellion and destruction of the Yellow Turbans in eastern China]1 mutiny and rebellion in Liang province in the northwest 185 fires in the imperial palaces, and tax levies to rebuild them; Emperor Ling establishes the Hall of Ten Thousand Gold Pieces in the Western Garden; further development of the sale of offices the Liang province rebels approach Chang’an but are driven back Black Mountain bandit groups in the Taihang range 187 unsuccessful attack into Liang province by Geng Bi Wuhuan mutiny and rebellion in the north sale of secondary marquisates 188 Bobo “White Wave” rebels in Xihe commandery Governors are appointed to certain provinces in place of the lower- ranking Inspectors rebels kill the Southern Shanyu Qiangqu; collapse of the Xiongnu state establishment of the Western Gardens corps under eight colonels Liang province rebels advance into Youfufeng 189 Huangfu Song drives back the Liang province rebels; the rebellion splin- ters but the northwest is lost Liu Yu settles the Wuhuan rebellion in the northeast 13 May: death of Emperor Ling 1 The rebellion of the Yellow Turbans has been discussed in Chapter 8. © Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, 2017 | doi 10.1163/9789004325203_013 End of an Empire (185–189) 419 15 May: Liu Bian is placed upon the throne under the regency of his mother the
    [Show full text]
  • Jian'an Literature Revisited: Poetic Dialogues in the Last Three
    Jian’an Literature Revisited: Poetic Dialogues in the Last Three Decades of the Han Dynasty Hsiang-Lin Shih A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy University of Washington 2013 Reading Committee: David R. Knechtges, Chair Ching-Hsien Wang Zev Handel Program Authorized to Offer Degree: Asian Languages and Literature ©Copyright 2013 Hsiang-Lin Shih University of Washington Abstract Jian’an Literature Revisited: Poetic Dialogues in the Last Three Decades of the Han Dynasty Hsiang-Lin Shih Chair of the Supervisory Committee: Professor David R. Knechtges Department of Asian Languages and Literature The Jian’an period (196-220), which is best known through the fictionalized account in the Romance of the Three States, is also an important literary period. It is celebrated for its major writers such as Cao Cao, Cao Pi, Cao Zhi and Wang Can. Previous scholars have mainly been concerned with the life and poetry of an individual writer. In this dissertation, I attempt to take an approach that crosses the boundary between individual writers. I read Jian’an poems— including shi, fu, and yuefu—as the authors’ poetic dialogues with their contemporaries. This approach is based on the fact that the writers gathered at the court of Cao Cao and shared the language of poetry. Whether drinking together or living apart, they often engaged in a dialogue on a common topic through the medium of writing. Their topics range from travel, careers, expeditions, to merriment. Like the Athenian speechmakers in Plato’s “Symposium,” Jian’an writers also tried to impress, persuade, entertain and challenge one another in their poems.
    [Show full text]
  • Chronology of Shitao's Life
    SHITAO APPENDIX ONE Chronology of Shitao's Life References are given here only for information that is not 6r), as the Shunzhi emperor, accompanied by the appoint- presented elsewhere in this book in fuller form (especially ment of Hong Taiji's younger brother, Dorgon (r 6r 2-50), in Chapters 4-6) and accessible through the index. Here, as regent. as throughout this study, years refer to Chinese lunar years. Most of the places mentioned can be found on r644 Map 3. Where an existing artwork contradicts the dates Fall of Beijing to the Shun regime of Li Zicheng, followed given here for the use of specific signatures and seals, this shortly after by their abandonment of Beijing to Qing will generally mean that I am not convinced of the work's forces. Dorgon proclaimed Qing rule over China in the authenticity (though there will inevitably be cases of over- name of the Shunzhi emperor, who shortly after was sight or ignorance as well). With the existence and loca- brought to Beijing. In south China, resistance to the Man- tion in mainland Chinese libraries of rare publications chus crystallized around different claimants to the Ming and manuscripts by no less than thirty-six of his friends throne, whose regimes are collectively known as the and acquaintances newly established, providing a rich Southern Ming. new vein for biographical research, and with new works by Shitao regularly coming to light, this chronology must r645 be considered provisional) Fall of Nanjing to Qing forces. In Guilin in the ninth r642 month, Zhu Hengjia was attacked and defeated by forces of the Southern Ming Longwu emperor, Zhu Yujian, Shitao was born into the family of the Ming princes of under the command of Qu Shisi, and taken to Fuzhou, Jingjiang, under the name of Zhu Ruoji.
    [Show full text]
  • AAAI-20 Poster Session Schedule
    AAAI-20 Poster / Demo Paper Guide Americas Hall I / II New York Hilton Midtown Hotel Sunday, February 9, 7:30 – 9:30 PM Monday, February 10, 7:20 – 9:20 PM Tuesday, February 11, 6:30 – 8:30 PM WELCOME TO THE AAAI-20 POSTER AND DEMO SESSIONS! Each AAAI 20 Poster/Demo Session will include posters by authors who give oral or spotlight presentations during the conference. Poster presentations are scheduled on the same evening as the oral presentation or spotlight presentation, except for Wednesday oral presentations, which will be presented in poster format on Tuesday evening. (Note that some oral paper presenters elected not to participate in the poster portion of the program.) Papers will be organized by primary subject areas in the poster/demo sessions and signs will be posted to designate clusters of subject areas. Posters will be arranged within subject area by paper ID numbers. Sunday evening posters will also include International Science Fair AAAI award-winning projects, Doctoral Consortium papers, Undergraduate Consortium papers, and EAAI-20 posters. A total of 25 technical demos and 137 student abstract posters will be divided among the three evening sessions. Twenty student abstract posters, selected as finalists in the 3-Minute Presentation Award Contest, will be presented on Monday evening, and are designated by an * in the schedule. A map will be posted in Guidebook and the poster hall to assist authors and attendees in locating presentations. The number preceding the paper code and title denotes the corresponding board position
    [Show full text]
  • Representing Kingship and Imagining Empire in Southern Dynasties Court Poetry
    T’OUNG PAO 18 T’oung PaoXiaofei 102-1-3 Tian (2016) 18-73 www.brill.com/tpao International Journal of Chinese Studies/Revue Internationale de Sinologie Representing Kingship and Imagining Empire in Southern Dynasties Court Poetry Xiaofei Tian* (Harvard University) Abstract Before the fifth century, the imperial identity of a ruler seems to have disabled him as a writer rather than encouraged him to be more prolific. Literary production gradually became centered in the court by the mid-fifth century, and a distinct feature of Southern Dynasties literature is the phenomenon that emperors and princes joined with their courtiers in the act of writing poetry on social occasions. This paper focuses on a number of poems by Emperor Wen of the Song (r. 424-453), Yan Yanzhi (384-456), Xie Tiao (464-499), Shen Yue (441-513), and Liu Xiaochuo (481- 539) that represent kingship and empire and thereby become a means of disseminating and implementing imperial power. In particular, it examines the physical and discursive construction of the capital Jiankang. We see thereby that Southern Dynasties court poetry was instrumental in the performance of sovereignty and the envisioning of the new, southern empire. Résumé Avant le Ve siècle, le fait d’accéder au titre d’empereur semble avoir réduit ceux à qui cela arrivait à l’incapacité en tant qu’auteurs, plutôt que de les encourager à une prolixité accrue. Vers le milieu du Ve siècle en revanche, la production littéraire tendit à se concentrer sur la cour, et l’un des traits particuliers de la littérature des dynasties du Sud est de voir empereurs et princes se joindre à leurs courtisans pour composer des poèmes lors de réunions amicales.
    [Show full text]