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Legends of the Building of Old Peking

ISBN: 9789629963132
定價: HK$ 400.00
作者: Hok Lam Chan
語言: 英語
出版社: 中文大學出版社
分類:
出版日期: 2008-01-01
發行日期: 2008-02-04
訂數:
About the Book Legends of the Building of Old Peking examines a series of popular legends surrounding the building and rebuilding of the city that served as the capital of a succession of dynasties, including the Nazha or Nezha City legend of the Yuan (1272-1368) “Great Capital” and the Ming (1368-1644) “Northern Capital”, and the Mongolian legend of “siting by bowshot to locate the capital city” and its Chinese adaptations. These legends reveal a rich tapestry of religious and cultural traditions surrounding the majority Han and non-Han people's conceptions of the origins of their capital cities─legends that are distinct from imperial ideologies and dynastic traditions, and evolved under changing political and cultural circumstances. The book is a unique study of the historical origins of old Peking (spelled thus to distinguish it from modern Beijing) as well as the genesis and efflorescence of related popular culture in today’s capital of China. About the Author Hok-lam Chan is Affiliate Professor of Chinese History, Department of Asian Languages and Literature, University of Washington, Seattle; and Honorary Professor, Institute of Chinese Studies, the Chinese University of Hong Kong. A specialist in late imperial China, he is the author of a number of books, including Legitimation in Imperial China, The Fall of the Jurchen Chin, China and the Mongols (Variorum); and three volumes of essays in Chinese on Song and Ming history published by The Chinese University Press. Book Review “Each story brings a political figure or ruler face to face with the legend: the integral relationship between the eight-armed Buddhist and folk child-deity Nezha and two ministers named Liu, the flight of a Mongolian archer's arrow and the ethnicity of the Yongle emperor, and others. In uncovering these legends, the interplay of mythology, folklore, and cosmology are examined against history and urban reality. Meticulously researched, this ground-breaking book is the achievement of a career of in-depth examination and interpretation of primary resources.”──Nancy Shatzman Steinhardt, Professor of East Asian Languages and Civilization, University of Pennsylvania, Author of Chinese Imperial City Planning