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Alicia Little (1845-1926) was a prolific writer who moved to China after her marriage to missionary Archibald Little (1838-1907) in 1866. She published many accounts of Chinese culture and society before founding the successful campaign against foot-binding in 1895. This volume, first published in 1903, contains her biography of the eminent Chinese statesman Li Hung-Chang (1823-1901). Li was a towering figure in late nineteenth century Chinese political life, exerting a profound influence over Chinese foreign policy and relations and overseeing China's development of western style industrialism until his dramatic fall from power following China's defeat in the 1894 Sino-Japanese War. Using contemporary newspaper accounts, eyewitness descriptions, and interviews with his contemporaries, Little describes Li's life chronologically.
Li, Hongzhang, --- China --- History --- Li, Hung-chang, --- Ri, Kōshō, --- Likhunchzhan, --- 李鴻章, --- 李鸿章, --- Li, Suyi bo, --- Li, Su-i po, --- 李肅毅伯, --- Li, Wenzhong gong, --- Li, Wen-chung kung, --- 李文忠公, --- Li, Wenzhong, --- Li, Wen-chung, --- Livėnʹchzhun, --- 李文忠, --- Li, Zifu, --- Li, Tzu-fu, --- 李子黻, --- Li, Jianfu, --- Li, Chien-fu, --- 李渐甫, --- Li, Shaoquan, --- Li, Shao-chʻüan, --- 李少荃, --- 李少泉, --- Li, Yisou, --- Li, I-sou, --- 李仪叟, --- Li, Zhangtong, --- Li, Chang-tʻung, --- 李章铜, --- Li, Xingxin, --- Li, Hsing-hsin, --- 李省心, --- Hongzhang, Li, --- Hung-chang, Li,
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In Dialectics of Spontaneity , Zhiyi Yang examines Su Shi’s poetry on art and connoisseurship, his emulation of Tao Qian in exile poetry, and his inner alchemical practice. She argues that the concept of absolute spontaneity is defined negatively, and artistic and ethical spontaneity which can be actualized must be provisional and conditioned. This book argues that Su Shi’s lyrical persona of a 'spontaneous genius' is a construction that serves various rhetorical and existential purposes. Making use of Su’s prolific works and referring to a broad scope of Western philosophy, this book not only enriches the literature on Su Shi, but further attempts to engages Chinese literature in a cross-cultural and interdisciplinary dialogue.
Spontaneity (Philosophy) in literature. --- Poetics --- History --- Su, Shi, --- Su, Shih, --- Sushi, --- Soo, Shih, --- So, Shoku, --- 蘇軾, --- 苏轼, --- Su, Wenzhong gong, --- Su, Wen-chung kung, --- Su Wenzhong gong, --- Su Wen-chung kung, --- 蘇文忠公, --- Su, Zizhan, --- Su, Tzu-chan, --- 蘇子瞻, --- Su, Hezhong, --- Su, Ho-chung, --- 蘇和仲, --- Dongpo jushi, --- Tung-pʻo chü-shih, --- 東坡居士, --- Laoquan shanren, --- Lao-chʻüan shan-jen, --- 老泉山人, --- Kuang fushi, --- Kʻuang fu-shih, --- 狂副使, --- Tieguan daoren, --- Tʻieh-kuan tao-jen, --- 鐵冠道人, --- Su, Zhanggong, --- Su, Chang-kung, --- 蘇長公, --- Su, Dongpo, --- Su, Dong-po, --- Sudongpo, --- Su, Tung-pʻo, --- So, Tongpʻa, --- So, Tong-pʻa, --- So, Tōba, --- Tô Đông Pha, --- 蘇東坡, --- Criticism and interpretation. --- Poetics. --- To 1500 --- Poetry --- Technique
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Transmitting Authority investigates the rise and fall of the cultural currency of the Confucian teacher Wang Tong (ca. 584–617), a.k.a. Master Wenzhong, in the five centuries following his death, by examining the textual and social history of the Zhongshuo , which purports to record Wang Tong’s teachings. Incorporating theories and methodologies from textual criticism, the history of the book, and cultural studies, Warner reveals evidence of the Zhongshuo ’s textual fluidity during the Tang and early Song dynasties, and argues that this fluidity attended the shifting terms of the Zhongshuo ’s cultural value for medieval China’s literati culture. In doing so, Warner offers scholars a model for the study of other works whose textual problems and historical significance have hitherto seemed inscrutable.
Wang, Tong, --- Ō, Tsū, --- 王通, --- Wang, Tʻung, --- Wenzhong, --- Wenzhongzi, --- 文中子, --- Wang, Zhongyan, --- 王仲淹, --- Criticism, Textual. --- S12/0420 --- S12/0228 --- S12/0230 --- China: Philosophy and Classics--Other Confucian writers before Zhu Xi (1130-1200) --- China: Philosophy and Classics--Chinese philosophy: Period of Disunity --- China: Philosophy and Classics--Chinese philosophy: Sui and Tang
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