Center for East Asian Studies Publication Serieshttps://hdl.handle.net/1808/10712024-03-28T22:07:33Z2024-03-28T22:07:33ZIdeas, Determination, Power: How Zhang Juzheng Dominated China, 1572–82Dardess, John W.https://hdl.handle.net/1808/318652021-08-22T08:00:37Z2021-08-01T00:00:00ZIdeas, Determination, Power: How Zhang Juzheng Dominated China, 1572–82
Dardess, John W.
Schneewind, Sarah; Tindall, Bruce M.
Zhang Juzheng (1525-1582) was psychologically the most complex of Ming
China’s chief grand secretaries. His rise owed something to an appealing combination
of brilliance with diffidence and humility. He was learned, and mastered the literary
arts of memorization, comprehension, and interpretation, and the articulation of these
things in a clear and creative way in writing. But learning, for Zhang, was never
enough. One’s learning, if thoroughly and conscientiously come by, must somehow
find its appropriate impact and end in the rectified governance of a realm that after
functioning in a faltering way for two centuries had developed some very serious
problems. Anything less was just vapid talk. To prepare himself, Zhang joined learning
with psychological self-strengthening to meet the political resistance that could be
expected in the future. Zhang was not outgoing, but did share feats and frustrations
with friendly colleagues in the field. Was Zhang Juzheng corrupt? Martyr complex. (Sarah Schneewind)
This posthumous work was a “handwritten pencil manuscript on scrap paper, left unfinished" when John W. Dardess passed away on March 31, 2020. Bruce M. Tindall transcribed the manuscript, and was lightly edited by Sarah Schneewind and Bruce M. Tindall (1956-2021).
2021-08-01T00:00:00Z堪薩斯大學東亞圖書館五十年Doll, Vickiehttps://hdl.handle.net/1808/299932020-02-25T09:00:50Z2012-01-01T00:00:00Z堪薩斯大學東亞圖書館五十年
Doll, Vickie
A brief history of the East Asian collection of the University of Kansas. Chinese translation of the author’s 2010 article “Fifty years of the East Asian Collection at the University of Kansas” appeared in X. P. Zhou (Ed.), Collecting Asia: East Asian Libraries in North America, 1868-2008. Ann Arbor, Mich.: Association for Asian Studies.
This is the Chinese translation issued in traditional Chinese characters of the author’s 2010 chapter in Collecting Asia by the Association of Asian Studies. The first Chinese translation in simplified Chinese characters was published in 2012. This 2019 edition was published in print and in ebook.
2012-01-01T00:00:00Z米国における能楽研究の実態と私の能狂言を中心とした演出活動 ―1960年代から20世紀の終わりまでー (complete works)Tsubaki, AndrewTsubaki, アンドリュー T椿, アンドリュー Thttps://hdl.handle.net/1808/276832019-02-14T09:01:18Z2019-02-01T00:00:00Z米国における能楽研究の実態と私の能狂言を中心とした演出活動 ―1960年代から20世紀の終わりまでー (complete works)
Tsubaki, Andrew; Tsubaki, アンドリュー T; 椿, アンドリュー T
History and studies of Noh in U. S. as looking through Andrew Tsubaki's kyōgen programs, from 1960 to the end of the 20th century (complete works).
This monograph combines previously published all 8 essays on history and condition studies of Noh as looking through Andrew Tsubaki's kyōgen programs in U. S. from 1960 to the end of the 20th century. Those essays were published in the early 2000s by the Zeami Association's journal (総合芸術としての能 Nō as the Comprehensive Art).
2019-02-01T00:00:00Z米国における能楽研究の実態と私の能狂言を中心とした演出活動 (8) ―1960年代から20世紀の終わりまでーTsubaki, Andrew椿, アンドリューhttps://hdl.handle.net/1808/276742019-02-02T09:01:32Z2002-03-01T00:00:00Z米国における能楽研究の実態と私の能狂言を中心とした演出活動 (8) ―1960年代から20世紀の終わりまでー
Tsubaki, Andrew; 椿, アンドリュー
Andrew Tsubaki reports on the study of Nō musical theatre in the United States during the 1960s and the later twentieth century.
This is the final part of an eight-part essay.
2002-03-01T00:00:00Z