<p>Only since the 1960s has the study of the Jurchen Chin gradually become a subfield of academic inquiry, with particularly significant strides having been made since the late 1980s. This present volume is the first in any language to demonstrate the importance of cultural developments under the Chin both for their continuation of earlier northern patterns and for their own contributions in such areas as literature, art, Confucian thought, and Buddhist and Taoist religious practices. As Herbert Franke observes in his Foreword: "It is now possible to perceive more clearly the contours of a distinctly northern cultural identity in the 12th and 13th centuries, a period that can henceforth no longer be regarded as an unproductive transitional phase between Sung and Yüan."</p><p>"I believe that this multifaceted approach to the Chin ultimately illuminates a dim and undervalued segment of Chinese cultural history and that this book will contribute significantly to Sinology overall." — Cynthia Ning, University of Hawaii</p>
Illustrations
Table of Dynasties
Acknowledgments
Contributors
A Note on Romanization
Foreword
Herbert Franke
Introduction
Hoyt Cleveland Tillman and Stephen H. West
I. Politics and Institutions
1. An Overview of Chin History and Institutions
Hoyt Cleveland Tillman
2. The Jurchen-Sung Cogitation: Some Overlooked Points
James T. C. Liu
3. Public Schools in the Chin Dynasty
Tao Jing-shen
II. Religion and Thought
4. Cofucianism under the Chin and the Impact of Sung Confucian Tao-hsüeh
Hoyt Cleveland Tillman
5. Chao Ping-wen (1159-1232): Foundation for Literati Learning
Peter K. Bol
6. Buddhism and Taoism under the Chin
Yao Tao-chung
III. Literature and Art
7. Five Paintings of Animal Subjects or Narrative Themes and Their Relevance to Chin Culture
Susan Bush
8. Jurchen Literature under the Chin
Jin Qicong
9. Satire and Allegory in All Keys and Modes
Wilt Idema
10. Chilly Seas and East-Flowing Rivers: Yüan Hao-wen's Poems of Death and Disorder, 1233-35
Stephen H. West
Glossary
Bibliography
Index
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Hoyt Cleveland Tillman is Professor of History at Arizona State University, where he is also on the faculty of the Humanities Graduate Program, as well as a member of the Center for Asian Studies and the Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies. He is the author of Confucian Discourse and Chu Hsi's Ascendancy, and Utilitarian Confucianism: Ch'en Liang's Challenge to Chu His. Stephen H. West is Professor of East Asian Languages at the University of California, Berkeley. He is the author of Vaudeville and Narrative: Aspects of Chin Literature, and co-author of Chinese Theater from 1100-1450: A Source Book and The Moon and the Zither: Wang Shifu's Story of the Western Wing.