Tuesday, June 23, 2020

Reading Du Fu: Nine Views (九家讀杜)

Editor:
Xiaofei Tian

Publisher:
Hong Kong University Press

Publication date:
July 2020



Abstract:
This is the first collection of essays in English, contributed by well-known experts of Chinese literature as well as scholars of a younger generation, dedicated to the poetry of Du Fu, commonly regarded as the greatest Chinese poet. These essays are engaged in historically nuanced close reading of Du Fu’s poems, both canonical and less known, from new angles and in various contexts, and discuss a series of critical issues, including the local and the imperial; the body politic and the individual body; poetry and geography; perspectives on the complicated relation of religion and literature; materiality and contemporary reception of Du Fu; poetry and visual art; and tradition and modernity.

Many of the poems discussed in this book were written in the backwater town of Kuizhou, far from Du Fu’s earlier residence in the capital city Chang’an, at a time when the Tang dynasty was going through devastating social and political disturbances. The authors contend that Du Fu’s isolation from the elite literary establishments allowed him to become a pioneer who introduced a new order to the Chinese poetic discourse. However, his attention to details in everyday reality, his preoccupation with domestic life and the larger issues embroiled in it, his humor, and his ability to surprise tend to be obscured by the clichéd image of the “poet sage” and “poet historian”—an image this collection of essays successfully complicates.

Table of Contents:

Introduction
Xiaofei Tian

Section I: Home, Locale, Empire
1. Foundings of Home: On Du Fu and Poetic Success
Jack W. Chen

2. Thinking through Poetry: Du Fu’s “Getting Rid of the Blues” (Jie men)
Stephen Owen

3. History Channels: Commemoration and Communication in Du Fu’s Kuizhou Poems
Gregory Patterson

4. Ironic Empires
Lucas Rambo Bender

Section II: Poetry and Buddhism
5. Refuges and Refugees: How Du Fu Writes Buddhism
Paul Rouzer
6. Feeding the Phoenix: Du Fu’s Qinzhou-Tonggu Series
Xiaofei Tian

Section III: Reception and Re-creation
7. Sources of Difficulty: Reading and Understanding Du Fu
Christopher M. B. Nugent

8. Ming-Qing Paintings Inscribed with Du Fu’s Poetic Lines
Ronald Egan

9. Six Modernist Poets in Search of Du Fu
David Der-wei Wang

Monday, June 15, 2020

[Dissertation] Empire-Building and Market-Making at the Qin Frontier: Imperial Expansion and Economic Change, 221–207 BCE

Author:
Korolkov, Maxim

Submitted:
2020

School:
Columbia University

Abstract:
This dissertation explores the relationship between empire-building and economic change during the formative process of the Qin Empire. It employs transmitted and excavated textual materials as well as archaeological evidence to reconstruct institutions and practices of surplus extraction and economic management and their evolution during the period of Qin’s expansion culminating in the emergence of the first centralized bureaucratic empire in continental East Asia. I argue that the commercial expansion and the formation of markets for land, labor, and commodities during China’s early imperial period (221 BCE – 220 CE) can only be understood by considering their origins in the distributive command economy of the late Warring States and imperial Qin. The study focuses on the southern frontier zone of the empire, which is exceptionally well documented in the official and private documents excavated from the Qin and Han sites along the Middle Yangzi and its tributaries.

Chapter One “Introduction” outlines historiographical approaches to the study of the relationship between empire-building and economic change, particularly the impact of imperial conquest and extraction on commercial growth. It addresses the importance of frontiers as the sites of economic innovation and change in the ancient empires. I discuss the importance of the recent archaeological discovery of legal and administrative manuscripts from the Warring States (453–221 BCE), Qin (221–206 BCE), and Han (202 BCE – 220 CE) eras for the study of the administrative and economic organization in the early empires. The introduction also outlines the new perspectives on Qin empire-building and economic change made possible by the excavated documentary evidence.

Chapter Two “Strategies of conquest and resource extraction in the state and empire of Qin, mid-fourth to late third century BCE” explores the geographical and logistical rationales for the campaigns that brought the Qin armies to the Middle Yangzi and paved the way for further advance to the south of the river. I argue that the Qin developed its fiscal institutions as solutions to the problems of military supply and control over the conquered territories. This system of surplus extraction proved efficient in financing warfare and ensuring the central government’s control over its local agents. However, it faced severe challenges as its operational costs soared in the process of territorial expansion, while the redistributive effects of the fiscal system pitted the principal against the agents. The successes and failings of the Qin model of surplus extraction, and its revision during the subsequent Western Han period profoundly influenced the approaches to economic and territorial management throughout China’s imperial history.

Chapter Three “Formation of the imperial frontier: from interaction zone to centralized administration” focuses on the background and the immediate aftermath of the Qin conquest of lands to the south of Middle Yangzi, roughly coinciding with the modern province of Hunan and the southern part of Hubei Province. The chapter examines the longue durée of economic and political integration along the Middle Yangzi from the Late Neolithic period (third millennium BCE) to the dawn of the imperial era. This analysis sheds new light on the background of Qin imperial expansion in this region and the strategies of the “reconstruction of the South” adopted by the Qin emperors and the succeeding Han Empire. I conclude the chapter with detailed analysis of administrative organization and economic management in the Qin county of Qianling in present-day Western Hunan, whose archive was partly recovered during the archaeological excavation of the remains of the Qin town at Liye.

Chapter Four “Between command and market: the economy of convict labor” studies the enormous system of unfree labor that incorporated a considerable portion of the Qin Empire’s population and was the key instrument of the Qin command economy. The chapter offers a comparative perspective on the historical regimes of forced labor, which allows identification of economic rationales for such systems and the organizational challenges they faced. It proceeds with an analysis of the legal foundations of penal labor in Qin and the characteristics of the main groups of forced laborers before exploring the organization of the unfree labor economy in Qianling County where detailed data is available concerning the size of the convict population, their economic roles, and the management of their labor. The chapter then discusses changes in the Qin system of unfree labor, its decline after the fall of the Qin Empire, and its impact on the formation of markets for labor in early imperial China.

Chapter Five “Conquering distance: transferring goods and people in the Qin Empire” discusses the long-distance transfers of resources, goods, and people. As many other imperial states, the Qin sought to control the physical mobility of its subjects and resources by directing them into desirable channels and restricting unwanted moves. Excavated texts shed light on the previously unknown aspects of the integration of economic and humanitarian space within the empire. Although the imperial connectivity remained fragile and suffered setbacks when the physical and intellectual infrastructures of communication shrank or collapsed with the decline and fall of centralized power, the shared sphere of geographic mobility was essential for the formation of the imperial economy, society, and culture. It tended to regenerate itself after the periods of contraction or disruption and should therefore be considered an important factor in the resilience of centripetal trends in China’s political history.

Chapter Six “The state and the private economy” utilizes the materials from Qianling archive to study the relationship between the state and private economies. Although the ideologists of state-strengthening reforms in mid-fourth century BCE Qin cherished the idea that the latter should be completely subsumed under governmental dirigisme, by the times of the Qin Empire, officials recognized the autonomy of private markets and their own inability to substitute for the latter with distributive schemes. In its engagement with private economic actors, the government was guided by considerations of taxation and resource procurement; cost-reduction in the state economy; and maintenance of public order through the delineation of rights and obligations. Transformation of the state economy, its increasing exposure to private markets, and the expansion of the latter, often caused by the state demand for materials and manpower, were powerfully facilitated by the monetization of the frontier region attested in the textual and archaeological evidence.

Chapter Seven “Conclusion” summarizes the mutually constitutive relationships between empire-building and economic change in the Qin Empire; traces the development of economic and institutional changes, which become observable during the Qin imperial period, in the subsequent Han era; and formulates some general patterns of the state-economy relationship that may be of use in the comparative study of imperial economic systems.

Table of Contents:

Chapter 1 : Introduction
Chapter 2 : Strategies of conquest and resource extraction in the state and empire of Qin, mid-fourth to late third century BCE
Chapter 3 : Formation of the imperial frontier: from interaction zone to centralized
   administration
Chapter 4 : Between command and market: the economy of convict labor
Chapter 5 : Conquering distance: transferring goods and people in the Qin Empire
Chapter 6 : The state and the private economy
Chapter 7 : Conclusion

Sunday, June 14, 2020

The Cultures of Ancient Xinjiang, Western China: Crossroads of the Silk Roads

Editors:
Alison V.G. Betts, Marika Vicziany, Peter Jia and Angelo Andrea Di Castro

Publisher:
Archaeopress Archaeology

Publication date:
April 2020



Abstract:
The Cultures of Ancient Xinjiang, Western China: Crossroads of the Silk Roads unveils the ancient secrets of Xinjiang, western China, one of the least known but culturally rich and complex regions located at the heart of Asia. Historically, Xinjiang has been the geographic hub of the Silk Roads, serving international links between cultures to the west, east, north and south. Trade, artefacts, foods, technologies, ideas, beliefs, animals and people have traversed the glacier covered mountain and desert boundaries. Perhaps best known for the Taklamakan desert, whose name translates in the Uyghur language as ‘You can go in, you will never come out’, here the region is portrayed as the centre of an ancient Bronze Age culture, revealed in the form of the famous Tarim Mummies and their grave goods. Three authoritative chapters by Chinese archaeologists appear here for the first time in English, giving international audiences direct access to the latest research ranging from the central-eastern Xiaohe region to the western valleys of the Bortala and Yili Rivers. Other contributions by European, Australian and Chinese archaeologists address the many complexities of the cultural exchanges that ranged from Mongolia, through to Kashgar, South Asia, Central Asia and finally Europe in pre-modern times.

Table of Contents:
Chapter 1
Ancient Xinjiang at the International Crossroads
Marika Vicziany

Chapter 2
Xinjiang in Prehistory
Alison Betts

Chapter 3
The Xiaohe (Small River) Cemetery and the Xiaohe Culture
Yidilisi Abuduresule, Wenying Li, Xingjun Hu

Chapter 4
Tianshan as a Bridge: New Studies of Bronze Age Archaeology in the Western Tianshan,
Xinjiang, China
Dexin Cong

Chapter 5
A Report on Archaeological Findings in the Upper Yili Valley
Xuetang Liu

Chapter 6
Painted Pottery of the Late Bronze Age – Early Iron Age in Central Asia: New Data from Southern
Uzbekistan
Nikolaus G.O. Boroffka and Leonid M. Sverchkov

Chapter 7
Shifting Exchange Patterns During the Bronze and Iron Ages Between China and the West in Eurasia
Henri-Paul Francfort

Chapter 8
The Kashgar Oasis: Reassessing the Historical Record
Marika Vicziany and Angelo Andrea Di Castro

Chapter 9
The Kashgar Oasis in Buddhist and Pre Buddhist Times: the Archaeological and Environmental Record
Angelo Andrea Di Castro, Marika Vicziany and Xuan Zhu

Chapter 10
Unravelling Farming and Metallurgy in Ancient China with Nuclear Science
John Dodson, Pia Atahan and Xiaoqiang Li

Chapter 11
Early Wheat Cultivation and Plant Use in Xinjiang Prehistory: New Evidence Based on Starch Analysis
Peter Jia and Florence Chau

Tuesday, June 9, 2020

Longmen's Stone Buddhas and Cultural Heritage: When Antiquity Met Modernity in China

Author:
Dong Wang 王棟

Publisher:
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers

Publication date:
June 2020



Abstract:
This thoroughly researched book provides the first comprehensive history of how a UNESCO World Heritage site on the Central China Plain, Longmen’s caves and the Buddhist statuary of Luoyang, was rediscovered in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Drawing on original research and archival sources in Chinese, English, French, German, Japanese, and Swedish, as well as extensive fieldwork, Dong Wang traces the ties between cultural heritage and modernity, detailing how this historical monument has been understood from antiquity to the present. She highlights the manifold traffic and expanded contact between China and other countries as these nations were reorienting themselves in order to adapt their own cultural traditions to newly industrialized and industrializing societies. Unknown to much of the world, Longmen and its mesmerizing modern history takes readers to the heartland of China, known as “Chinese Babylon” a century ago. With remarkable depth and breadth, this book unravels both a bygone and a continuing human pursuit of artefacts—shared, spiritual, modern, and above all beautiful that have linked so many lives, Chinese and foreign.

Table of Contents:

How Longmen Was Remembered, Not Remembered and Misremembered as an Ancient Site in Premodern China

Shaping Chinese Modern Identity: Antiquities in Public Opinion at the Turn of the Twentieth Century

Voices of Silence: European Discovery of Longmen

"An Influence of the Souls of These Stone Saints": Early American and Japanese Recognition, between Universalism and Nationalism

Longmen and Osvald Sirén (1879-1966)

Blighted Beauty: Cultural Heritage Law in Early-Twentieth-Century China

UNESCO's Longmen and Chinese Urbanization: Better City, Better Life?