Columbia University Press
Emperor Wu Zhao and Her Pantheon of Devis, Divinities, and Dynastic Mothers
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[An] informative and entertaining excursion into the religio-political machinations of perhaps the most (in)famous woman in Chinese history.
Highly revealing... The amount of material that has been drawn upon to achieve this result is impressive.
A lively and captivating narrative that is sure to please both specialist and student alike.... Rothschild deserves tremendous applause.
Doris Kearns Goodwin, author of The Bully Pulpit: Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, and the Golden Age of Journalism:
What an original and remarkable story N. Harry Rothschild tells—of ancestors, power, and leadership. How a woman in an ancient, male-dominated culture employed art and poetry, history and mythology, and ritual and violence to create an ancestral line that consolidated her own gender-bending authority; the story of how Empress Wu invented herself as China's sole female ruler, the Emperor Wu Zhao.
Exhaustively researched...
Suzanne Cahill, University of California, San Diego:
This book is a tour de force of textual analysis and historical detective work that leaves previous sensationalistic accounts of Wu Zhao's rise to power in the dust.
Keith N. Knapp, The Citadel, The Military College of South Carolina:
With painstaking research, unerring insights, rich prose, and a sense of humor, Rothschild lavishly illustrates the political genius of Wu Zhao, China's only female emperor. Indicating her keen political instincts and expansive knowledge of China's cultural traditions, Rothschild adeptly delineates how, over the span of her fifty-year rule, Wu Zhao selectively made use of different goddesses and heroines to match the specific circumstances of her career's twists and turns.
Jonathan Karam Skaff, author of Sui-Tang China and Its Turko-Mongol Neighbors:
Wu Zhao is one of world history's most fascinating figures and the most powerful woman in China's long past. N. Harry Rothschild sheds new light on the ideological underpinnings of Wu Zhao's rise to power and unprecedented female dynasty. The Buddhist prophecies justifying her rule are well known, but Rothschild uncovers a more complex story that includes wise mothers and potent goddesses drawn from the Confucian, Daoist, and Buddhist traditions. In lively prose, Rothschild reveals an ever-evolving pantheon of female paragons that Wu Zhao deployed strategically before and after claiming the throne.
Victor H. Mair, University of Pennsylvania:
This is a fascinating study of the only female emperor in the whole of Chinese history. By delving deeply into the religious underpinnings of Wu Zetian's power in a way that not even the most dedicated approach to her utilization of Buddhist scriptures and doctrines alone could manage, this investigation illuminates the unique quality of Wu Zetian's reign far more effectively than previous studies. Emperor Wu Zhao and Her Pantheon of Devis, Divinities, and Dynastic Mothers is a solid piece of well-documented scholarship, yet it is vibrant and entertaining throughout.
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
vii -
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Illustrations
xi -
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Dynasties and Rulers Through the Mid-Tang
xiii -
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Wu Zhao's Titles at Different Stages of Her Career
xvii -
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Reign Eras from 655 to 705
xix -
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Acknowledgments
xxi -
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Introduction: Wu Zhao and Her Pantheon of Female Political Ancestors
1 -
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Part I. Goddesses of Antiquity
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One. Wu Zhao as the Late Seventh-Century Avatar of Primordial Goddess Nüwa
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Two. Sanctifying Luoyang: The Luo River Goddess and Wu Zhao
43 -
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Three. First Ladies of Sericulture: Wu Zhao and Leizu
60 - Part II. Dynastic Mothers, Exemplary Mothers
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Four. The Mother of Qi and Wu Zhao: Connecting to Antiquity, Elevating Mount Song
79 -
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Five. Ur-Mothers Birthing the Zhou Line: Jiang Yuan and Wu Zhao
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Six. Wenmu and Wu Zhao: Two Mothers of Zhou
109 -
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Seven. Four Exemplary Women in Wu Zhao’s Regulations for Ministers
124 - Part III. Drawing on the Numinous Energies of Female Daoist Divinities
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Eight. The Queen Mother of the West and Wu Zhao
149 -
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Nine. The Mother of Laozi and Wu Zhao: From One Grand Dowager to Another
167 -
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Ten. Rejected from the Pantheon: The Ill-Timed Rise of the Cult of Wei Huacun
179 - Part IV. Buddhist Devis and Goddesses
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Eleven. Dharma Echoes of Mother Māyā in Wu Zhao
195 -
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Twelve. Bodhisattva with a Female Body: Wu Zhao and Devi Jingguang
209 -
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Conclusions
227 -
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Appendix: Wu Zhao’s Pantheon of Female Political Ancestors
237 -
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Glossary of Chinese Places, Names, and Terms
239 -
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Notes
247 -
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Bibliography
311 -
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Index
339