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Journal Article
Journal of Chinese Literature and Culture (2024) 11 (2): 408–412.
Published: 01 November 2024
... read, chapter by chapter, and points things out to you that you may not have known, that you may have skipped over, and thus helps you create a framework for reading and interpreting this wonderful novel on your own terms. The commentary also notes three episodes that contribute to Baoyu's...
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Published: 01 November 2018
Figure 1. Cosine similarity between all pairs of chapters of the Mozi . For colors and notations, see text. More
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Published: 01 November 2018
Figure 8. Yingxiong ji citations in Sanguozhi and Shishuo xinyu chapters, concentrated primarily in the Sanguozhi region of the network. Conventions are as for figure 6 . More
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Published: 01 November 2018
Figure 2. Maximum cosine similarity score between chapters of the Mozi and any other chapter of the text More
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Published: 01 November 2018
Figure 6. Jin zhugong zan (purple) citations in Sanguozhi chapters (orange) and Shishuo xinyu chapters (green). Other conventions are as for figure 1 . More
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Published: 01 November 2018
Figure 3. N-gram similarity, n = 7. Highlighted regions: (1) the core chapters of the Mozi , with the notable exceptions of “Jian ai shang” 兼愛上, “Fei gong shang” 非攻上, and “Jie yong shang” 節用上 (Economy of Expenditures I), all have similarities with other core chapters on this metric, as well More
Journal Article
Journal of Chinese Literature and Culture (2019) 6 (2): 412–431.
Published: 01 November 2019
... important cultural institutions, this article considers the protagonist Tang Ao's 唐敖 voyage to bizarre, fantastical islands, narrated in the early chapters of the novel, as an account of his conversion from examination scholarship to fiction creation. From these islands, his symbolic realm of fictionality...
Journal Article
Journal of Chinese Literature and Culture (2021) 8 (2): 239–260.
Published: 01 November 2021
...Xinda Lian Abstract The secret of the “cumulative structure,” one of Zhuangzi's favorite rhetorical devices, is “adding.” To add is not to repeat but to arrange meanings of different shapes in various incremental parallel structures. This effective tool is used in his chapter titled “The Great...
Journal Article
Journal of Chinese Literature and Culture (2021) 8 (2): 371–398.
Published: 01 November 2021
... the empire-building project. This article compares the spatial form of the Yuding Nei ze yanyi 御定内則衍義 (1656), an expansion of the “Inner Standards” chapter of the Classic of Rites commissioned by the Shunzhi emperor, to that of the Yuding Xiao jing yanyi 御定孝經衍義 (1682), an expansion of the Classic of Filial...
Journal Article
Journal of Chinese Literature and Culture (2023) 10 (1): 221–243.
Published: 01 April 2023
... painted, its acknowledged author, Tang Shuyu, draws connections between women authors (defined broadly here to include both artists and writers) and virtuous women. First, her organization of the text's first five chapters foregrounds the social identities of women painters—a system that hints...
Journal Article
Journal of Chinese Literature and Culture (2017) 4 (1): 129–159.
Published: 01 April 2017
...I-Hsien Wu Abstract In chapter 1 of The Story of the Stone , the internal narrator notably censures erotic fiction and draws a line between his own narrative and the filthy obscenities. Yet the novel does the exact opposite. In the Stone , eroticism is not only part of a physiological act...
Journal Article
Journal of Chinese Literature and Culture (2018) 5 (2): 214–249.
Published: 01 November 2018
...Figure 8. Yingxiong ji citations in Sanguozhi and Shishuo xinyu chapters, concentrated primarily in the Sanguozhi region of the network. Conventions are as for figure 6 . ...
FIGURES | View All (13)
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Published: 01 November 2018
Figure 5. Network of citations in Sanguozhi and Shishuo xinyu . Green nodes represent Wei chapters, blue nodes represent Wu chapters, and purple nodes represent Shu chapters. Nodes representing chapters in the first volume of Shishuo xinyu are yellow, those in volume 2 are orange, and those More
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Published: 01 November 2018
Figure 1. Citations in Sanguozhi . Purple nodes represent cited texts. Green nodes represent Wei chapters, and orange nodes represent Wu chapters, both grouped together in relatively tight clusters. The blue nodes, representing Shu chapters, are more broadly distributed, as fewer sources More
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Published: 01 November 2018
Figure 4. Shishuo xinyu network center detail. Orange nodes represent Shishuo xinyu chapters, and cited texts are purple nodes. Texts cited frequently in multiple Shishuo xinyu chapters appear at the center of the network. Other conventions are as for figure 1 . More
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Published: 01 November 2018
Figure 2. Sanguozhi citations, Shu cluster detail. While many texts are cited only once per chapter, several local and regional histories like Huayang guozhi and Xiangyang ji 襄陽記 (The Record of Xiangyang) are cited almost exclusively in Shu chapters, while certain texts whose titles More
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Published: 01 November 2018
Figure 7. Jin zhugong zan citations, detail (see fig. 6 ). Though other nodes and edges are hidden, this image preserves the location of each node in the larger network. Note the presence of edges connecting Shishuo xinyu and Sanguozhi chapters with no intermediary cited text node More
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Published: 01 November 2018
Figure 11. Wenshi zhuan citations, detail (see fig. 10 ). This text, though obscure, is repeatedly cited in a variety of Shishuo xinyu and Sanguozhi chapters. More
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Published: 01 November 2018
Figure 9. Yingxiong ji citations, detail (see fig. 8 ). Though used much more frequently in Sanguozhi citations, Yingxiong ji is cited once in the ninth chapter of Shishuo xinyu . More
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Published: 01 November 2018
Figure 13. Network of texts cited in Sanguozhi and Shishuo xinyu annotations, without “Standard Histories.” The entire network has been recalculated and redrawn without the influence of citations of “Standard Histories.” Nodes representing chapters from the Wei (green), Wu (blue), and Shu More