Book
Body, Ritual and Identity
A New Interpretation of the Early Qing Confucian Yan Yuan (1635-1704)
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Jui-Sung Yang
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
2016
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About this book
Yan Yuan (1635-1704) has long been a controversial figure in the study of Chinese intellectual and cultural history. Although marginalized in his own time largely due to his radical attack on Zhu Xi (1130-1200), Yan was elevated to a great thinker during the early twentieth century because of the drastic changes of the modern Chinese intellectual climate. In Body, Ritual and Identity: A New Interpretation of the Early Qing Confucian Yan Yuan (1635-1704), Yang Jui-sung has demonstrated that the complexity of Yan’s ideas and his hatred for Zhu Xi in particular need to be interpreted in light of his traumatic life experiences, his frustration over the fall of the Ming dynasty, and anxiety caused by the civil service examination system. Moreover, he should be better understood as a cultural critic of the lifestyle of educated elites of late imperial China. By critically analyzing Yan’s changing intellectual status and his criticism that the elite lifestyle was unhealthy and feminine, this new interpretation of Yan Yuan serves to shed new light on our understanding of the features as well as problems of educated elite culture in late imperial China.
Author / Editor information
Jui-sung Yang, Ph.D. (1997), University of California, Los Angeles, is Associate Professor of History at National Chengchi University, Taiwan. He has published a number of articles on late imperial and modern Chinese intellectual and cultural history, and a book: Sick Man, Yellow Peril and Sleeping Lion: Chinese Images from “Western” Perspective & the Discourses of Modern Chinese National Identity (in Chinese), Taipei: NCCU Press, 2010.
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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
April 26, 2016
eBook ISBN:
9789004318731
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
186
eBook ISBN:
9789004318731
Keywords for this book
China; masculinity; Confucianism; Neo-Confucianism; culture; crisis; father; transference; confucianism
Audience(s) for this book
Specialists and graduate and undergraduate students, educated laymen who are interested in later imperial and modern Chinese intellectual and cultural history as well as psychohistory.