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Section 17. Notation-Book and Literary Style
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Preface vii
- Contents ix
- Foreword xi
- Introduction xxiii
-
Translation
- Foreword 11
- Author’s First Preface 14
- Author’s Second Preface 16
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PART I. The Early Ch’ing Period: The School of “Practical Statesmanship” and Other Trends
- Section 1. Introduction 19
- Section 2. General Setting 21
- Section 3. Reaction to Sung-Ming Neo-Confucianism 27
- Section 4. Ku Yen-wu (1613–1682) 29
- Section 5. Yen Jo-chü (1636–1704) and Hu Wei (1633–1714) 32
- Section 6. Huang Tsung-hsi (1610–1695) and Wang Fu-chih (1619–1692) 36
- Section 7. Yen Yuan (1635–1704) 40
- Section 8. Met Wen-ting (1632–1721), Ku Tsu-yü (1631–1692), and Liu Hsien-t’ing (1648–1695) 42
- Section 9. Summary 45
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PART II. The Middle Ch’iiig Period: The Dominance of the School of Empirical Research; The Beginnings of Reaction
- Section 10. Hui Tung [1697–1758] 51
- Section 11. Tai Chen [1724–1777] 54
- Section 12. Tuan Yü-ts’ai [1735–1815], Wang Nien-sun [1744–1832], and Wang Yin-chih [1766–1834] 63
- Section 13. Summary 67
- Section 17. Notation-Book and Literary Style 69
- Section 18. General Encouragement of Scholarship in the Society 73
- Section 19. The Ancient-Style Writers: The T’ung-ch’eng School and the Tang-hu School 75
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PART III. The Late Ch’ing Period: The Modern Text School and Other New Trends
- Section 20. Division in the Ch’ing School of Learning 83
- Section 21. Modern Texts versus Ancient Texts 85
- Section 22. The Kung-yang Commentary 88
- Section 23. K’ang Yu-wei [1858-1927] 91
- Section 24. K’ang's Ta- t’ung shu 95
- Section 25. Liang Ch’i-ch’ao [1873–1929] 98
- Section 26. Contrast between K’ang and Liang 102
- Section 27. Tan Ssu-t’ung [1866–1898] 107
- Section 28. Chang Ping-lin [1868–1936] 111
- Section 29. Translation of Western Works and the “Scholars of New Learning” 112
- Section 30. Buddhism in the Late Ch’ing 115
- Section 31. Ch’ing Arts and Literature 118
- Section 32. An Evaluation of Ch’ing Scholarship 120
- Section 33. General Conclusion 122
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NOTES. INDEX
- Notes 129
- Index 143
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REFERENCE MATTER, BIBLIOGRAPHY, GLOSSARY
- BIBLIOGRAPHY 151
- GLOSSARY 189
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Preface vii
- Contents ix
- Foreword xi
- Introduction xxiii
-
Translation
- Foreword 11
- Author’s First Preface 14
- Author’s Second Preface 16
-
PART I. The Early Ch’ing Period: The School of “Practical Statesmanship” and Other Trends
- Section 1. Introduction 19
- Section 2. General Setting 21
- Section 3. Reaction to Sung-Ming Neo-Confucianism 27
- Section 4. Ku Yen-wu (1613–1682) 29
- Section 5. Yen Jo-chü (1636–1704) and Hu Wei (1633–1714) 32
- Section 6. Huang Tsung-hsi (1610–1695) and Wang Fu-chih (1619–1692) 36
- Section 7. Yen Yuan (1635–1704) 40
- Section 8. Met Wen-ting (1632–1721), Ku Tsu-yü (1631–1692), and Liu Hsien-t’ing (1648–1695) 42
- Section 9. Summary 45
-
PART II. The Middle Ch’iiig Period: The Dominance of the School of Empirical Research; The Beginnings of Reaction
- Section 10. Hui Tung [1697–1758] 51
- Section 11. Tai Chen [1724–1777] 54
- Section 12. Tuan Yü-ts’ai [1735–1815], Wang Nien-sun [1744–1832], and Wang Yin-chih [1766–1834] 63
- Section 13. Summary 67
- Section 17. Notation-Book and Literary Style 69
- Section 18. General Encouragement of Scholarship in the Society 73
- Section 19. The Ancient-Style Writers: The T’ung-ch’eng School and the Tang-hu School 75
-
PART III. The Late Ch’ing Period: The Modern Text School and Other New Trends
- Section 20. Division in the Ch’ing School of Learning 83
- Section 21. Modern Texts versus Ancient Texts 85
- Section 22. The Kung-yang Commentary 88
- Section 23. K’ang Yu-wei [1858-1927] 91
- Section 24. K’ang's Ta- t’ung shu 95
- Section 25. Liang Ch’i-ch’ao [1873–1929] 98
- Section 26. Contrast between K’ang and Liang 102
- Section 27. Tan Ssu-t’ung [1866–1898] 107
- Section 28. Chang Ping-lin [1868–1936] 111
- Section 29. Translation of Western Works and the “Scholars of New Learning” 112
- Section 30. Buddhism in the Late Ch’ing 115
- Section 31. Ch’ing Arts and Literature 118
- Section 32. An Evaluation of Ch’ing Scholarship 120
- Section 33. General Conclusion 122
-
NOTES. INDEX
- Notes 129
- Index 143
-
REFERENCE MATTER, BIBLIOGRAPHY, GLOSSARY
- BIBLIOGRAPHY 151
- GLOSSARY 189