資料來源: Google Book
In the shadow of the Han :literati thought and society at the beginning of the Southern dynasties
- 作者: Holcombe, Charles,
- 出版: Honolulu : University of Hawaii Press ©1994.
- 稽核項: 1 online resource (xi, 238 pages) :map.
- 標題: Electronic books. , China. , China History -- Northern and Southern dynasties, 386-589. , Northern and Southern Dynasties (China) , Histoire , 386-589 , HISTORY. , Chine , Chinees. , History. , China , Cultuurgeschiedenis. , HISTORY Asia -- General. , Chine Histoire -- 386-589 (dynastie du Nord et du Sud) , History , General. , HISTORY
- ISBN: 082486297X , 9780824862978
- ISBN: 0824815920 , 9780824815929
- 試查全文@TNUA:
- 附註: Includes bibliographical references (pages 191-232) and index. 1. Introduction: Reimagining China -- 2. Refugee State: A Brief Chronicle of the Eastern Chin -- 3. The Socioeconomic Order -- 4. The Institutional Machinery of Literati Ascendance -- 5. Literati Culture -- 6. "True Man": The Power of a Cultural Ideal -- 7. Epilogue: Imperial Restoration.
- 摘要: Falling between the great unified empires of the Han and T'ang, the Period of Division (A.D. 220-589) is one of the most overlooked and least understood eras in Chinese history. At the start of the fourth century much of China's traditional heartland fell under the control of ethnic non-Chinese. The remnants of the Chinese court fled to the still somewhat exotic region south of the Yangtze River, where an Eastern Chin dynasty (318-420) was established in virtual exile. The state's ability to command population and other resources had declined sharply from the heights of Han imperial splendor, but it retained considerable influence over most aspects of society, including the economy. This residual state power made possible the rise, through the monopolization of government office, of a new elite class - the literati, or shih-ta-fu. , In this groundbreaking history, Charles Holcombe examines the conditions that produced the literati and shaped their activities during the first of the Southern dynasties, with particular attention to the life and thought of the fourth-century monk Chih Tun (314-366). , The security of the literati's positions in the state, as well as the cooptation process through which they rose to office, encouraged them to neglect the details of actual administrative service and concentrate instead upon peer recognition through the refinement of social graces and through literary, artistic, and philosophical achievements. While the empire hung poised on the brink of ruin, fourth-century literati engaged in round after round of abstruse discussion concerning the ultimate meaning of existence. Their seemingly impractical dalliances blossomed, however, into an age of intellectual and cultural creativity second only to the Warring States period of the late classical era. The Southern dynasties even witnessed significant commercialization and economic growth. Far from the dark ages that their political disunity might imply, China's Southern dynasties reveal themselves to have been great eras of an unexpected kind. , In the Shadow of the Han explores some of the implications of this distinctive Southern dynasty culture.
- 電子資源: https://dbs.tnua.edu.tw/login?url=https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=39118
- 系統號: 005292649
- 資料類型: 電子書
- 讀者標籤: 需登入
- 引用網址: 複製連結
Charles Holcombe's study of the society and thought of the Eastern Jin (318-420) elite is a valuable addition to what has . . . been a rather thin English-language literature on early medieval history. In the Shadow of the Han makes a compelling case ... that the 'period of disunity' between the Han and the Tang has been an unjustly neglected area. . . . It will prove stimulating reading for early medieval specialists, and . . . [for others] it will provide a highly competent and readable survey of a period that to this point has been poorly covered. —China Review International, Spring 1996 "The Period of Division between the Han and Sui/Tang has not received the attention it deserves in the West, for our views of Chinese history have frequently been distorted by the identification of success and civilisation with great and long-lasting dynasties. The centuries which followed the fall of the Han, however, were valuable not only for China's future development, but also as an occasion of human experience. Professor Holcombe has made an important contribution to our understanding of medieval China, and his work should do much to encourage the study of this formative period of philosophy and history." —R. R. C. de Crespigny, Australian National University "Historical scholarship on the Southern dynasties has long languished as a moribund offshoot of the study of Chinese poetry and religion. In the Shadow of the Han approaches this challenging period with a much broader sensitivity to the elite culture of the time, placing it within a clearly conceived socioeconomic and political context. The intellectual puzzles of Neo-Taoism and hsüan-hsüeh have never been more lucidly grounded in a credible historical world. This is a pioneering study that puts every student of early medieval China in Charles Holcombe's debt." —Dennis Grafflin, Bates College
來源: Google Book
來源: Google Book
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