Writing early China /
"Considers what unearthed written documents reveal about the creation and transmission of knowledge in ancient China"--
第一著者: | |
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フォーマット: | Licensed eBooks |
言語: | 英語 |
出版事項: |
Albany :
State University of New York Press,
[2023]
|
シリーズ: | SUNY series in Chinese philosophy and culture
|
オンライン・アクセス: | https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/jj.18255057 |
目次:
- List of illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Inscriptions
- Chapter One: History and inscriptions
- Chapter Two: The Bin Gong Xu inscription and the beginnings of the Chinese literary tradition
- Chapter Three: The writing of a late Western Zhou Bronze inscription
- Chapter Four: On the casting of the Art Institute of Chicago's Shi Wang Ding: with remarks on the important position of writing in the consciousness of ancient China
- Chapter Five: A possible lost classic: the *She Ming or *Command to She
- Chapter Six: Varieties of textual variants: evidence from the Tsinghua Bamboo-Slip *Ming Xun Manuscript
- Chapter Seven: Unearthed documents and the question of the oral versus written nature of the classic of poetry
- Chapter Eight: A first reading of the Anhui University Bamboo-Slip Shi Jing
- Chapter Nine: The Mu Tianzi Zhuan and King Mu-Period bronzes
- Chapter Ten: The Tsinghua Manuscript *Zheng Wen Gong wen Taibo and the question of the production of manuscripts in early China
- Chapter Eleven: The eighth century BCE Civil War in Jin as seen in the Bamboo Annals
- Chapter Twelve: The Qin *Bian Nian Ji and the beginnings of historical writing in China
- Notes
- Works cited
- Index.