
Power of the Words: Chen Prophecy in Chinese Politics (AD 265-618) (pp.

“A Response to Valentin Golovachev’s ‘Matricide during the Northern Wei’” (pp. “Anachronisms in Lüshi chunqiu and Shuo yuan” (pp. “Composed at Execution: A Look at Three ‘Poems upon Confronting the End’ (linzhong shi)” “Self as Historical Artifact: Ge Hong and Early Chinese Autobiographical Writing” (pp. “The Development of Local Writing in Early Medieval China” (pp. “The Reunification of China in AD 280: Jin’s Conquest of Eastern Wu” (pp. “The Road to Shu, from Zhang Zai to Li Bo” (pp. “The Librarian in Exile: Xie Lingyun’s Bookish Landscapes” (pp. “The Last Piece in the Wen xuan, Wang Sengda’s ‘Offering for Imperial Household Grandee Yan’” (pp. “On the Composition of Zhang Hua’s ‘Nüshi zhen’” (pp. “Reinvention of the ‘Late Season’ Motif in the Wen xuan” (pp. “Saying Goodbye: The Transformation of the Dirge in Early Medieval China” (pp. “Educational Frustration, Shape-Shifting Texts, and the Abiding Power of Anthologies: Three Versions of Wang Can Ascends the Tower” (pp. “Doubt and Faith at yuan Jie’s Creek: What Yang Wanli Found beneath the Wu Xi Moss” (pp. “Autumn Sounds: Music to the Ears Ouyang Xiu’s ‘Fu on Autumn’s Sounds’” (pp. “The Two Voices of Wangchuan Ji: Poetic Exchange between Wang Wei and Pei Di” (pp. “The Progress of an Envious Wretch: Tracing the Course of Xun Ji across the Boundary Lines of Sixth-Century China” (pp. “Recollections of a Fleeting Romance: The Wang Jingbo Narrative” (pp. Berkowitz, Robert Joe Cutter, Chiu-Mi Lai 221-22)ĮARLY MEDIEVAL CHINA 10-11, PART 2 (2005)Įssays in Honor of the Sixtieth Birthday of David R. LEE Jung-hwa and James MCDOUGALL Early Medieval China in the MLA Index (pp. “China: Dawn of a Golden Age: 200-750 AD” at the Metropolitan Museum of Art (pp. Geisterwege und Gräber in Spiegel der Geschichte (pp. Grabanlagen der Herrscherhäuser der südlichen Dynastien in China (420-589). Mirroring the Past: The Writing and Use of History in Imperial China (pp. “The Reclusive Gui-Cinnamon or Osmanthus?” (pp. “An Inquiry into Reign Era Changes under Wu Zhao, China’s Only Female Emperor” (pp. 583-589) and the Reunification of China” (pp. “The Last Lord of the South: Chen Houzhu (r. “The Drama of Numskulls: Structure, Texture, and Functions of the Scripture of One Hundred Parables” (pp. “The Circulation and Study of the Shishuo Xinyu in Korea” (pp. “Letters and Letter Writing in Early Medieval China” (pp. “Why I reprinted the Final Portion of the Vimalakīrti nirdeśa Using Movable Type Made of Clay” (pp. “Astrological Divination at the Tang Court” (pp. “Seeing Through Words: Shishuo xinyu and the Visual Arts, a Case Study” (pp. “On Hamlets (cun 村)in the Northern Dynasties” (pp. “Li Jing’s Antecedents: Continuity and Change in the Pragmatics of Medieval Chinese Warfare” (pp. “Writing the World in the Family Instructions of the Yan Clan” (pp. “Lightning in the Six Dynasties Period” (pp. SKAFF, Jonathan “Loyalties Divided: The Question of Ethnicity in the Tang-Türgish conflict of 708-709” (pp. “Resolve to Become a Buddha ((Chengfo)-Changing Aspirations and Imagery in Sixth-Century Chinese Buddhism” (pp. “The Way of the Warrior in Early Medieval China, Examined through the ‘Northern Yuefu’’” (pp. “The Age-Transcending Friendship of the Poets Fan Yun (413-503) and He Xun (ca. “Climate Change and Migrations of People during the Jin Dynasty” (pp. “Recruitment Revisited: the commissioned Civil Service of the Later Han” (pp. “Sites of Recognition: Burial, Mourning, and Commemoration in the Xun Family of Yingchuan, AD 140-305” (pp.


“Oral Formula and Intertextuality in the Chinese ‘Folk’ Tradition (Yuefu)” (pp. “Woman in the Tower: ‘Nineteen Old Poems” and the Poetics of Un/concealment.” (pp. “Bibliography of Western Works on Early Medieval China (2002-2009) (pp. “Praising a Ruler at a Dangerous Time: Two Poems by Lu Yun for Sima Ying” (pp. “The Accession of Sima Yan, AD 265: Legitimation by Ritual Replication” (pp. Andrew Chittick, Patronage and Community in Medieval China: The Xiangyang Garrison, 400-600 CE (pp. Wells, To Die and Not Decay: Autobiography and the Pursuit of Immortality in Early China (pp. “Laid to Rest There Among Mountains He Loved So Well”? In Search of Wang Xizhi’s Tomb” (pp. “Perspective and Appreciation in Xie Lingyun’s ‘Imitations of the Crown Prince of Wei’s Gatherings in Ye’” (pp. “The Last Word? Lu Yun’s ‘Nanzheng Fu’” (pp. Mathieu Debic, University of Texas at Dallas
