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barbarian
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Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1979) 38 (2): 382–384.
Published: 01 February 1979
...Young I. Lew Confucian Gentlemen and Barbarian Envoys: The Opening of Korea, 1875–1885 . By Martina Deuchler . Seattle and London : University of Washington Press (Published for the Royal Asiatic Society Korea Branch), 1977 . 310 pp. Illustrations. $17.00. Copyright © The Association...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1996) 55 (4): 999–1000.
Published: 01 November 1996
.... WILLIAM STEELE International Christian University Japan Encounters the Barbarian: Japanese Travellers in America and Europe. By W. G. BEASLEY. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1995. xi, 252 pp. $30.00. Japan's transformation from a weak, feudal society to a strong, modern state...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1968) 27 (3): 636–638.
Published: 01 May 1968
...Wolfram Eberhard Trade and Expansion in Han China. A Study in the Structure of Sino-Barbarian Economic Relations . By Ying-shih Yü . Berkeley and Los Angeles : University of California Press , 1967 . ix, 251 pp. Index, Glossary, Bibliography, Abbreviations, Maps, Chronology, Table...
Journal Article
Far Eastern Quarterly (1954) 14 (1): 108–109.
Published: 01 November 1954
...Knight Biggerstaff Copyright © The Association for Asian Studies, Inc. 1954 1954 China's Management of the American Barbarians: A Study of Sino-American Relations, 1841–1861, with Documents . By Earl Swisher . Far Eastern Association Monograph No. 2. New Haven : Far Eastern...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1963) 22 (3): 325–326.
Published: 01 May 1963
...Anne B. Clark The Red Barbarians. The Life and Times of Mao Tse-tung . By Roy MacGrecor-Hastie . Philadelphia : Chilton Co. , 1961 . 224 . Copyright © The Association for Asian Studies, Inc. 1963 1963 BOOK REVIEWS 325 ants in all cases. Judging from a comparison of the items which...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2021) 80 (3): 824–827.
Published: 01 August 2021
...Shao-yun Yang Rome, China, and the Barbarians: Ethnographic Traditions and the Transformation of Empires . By Randolph B. Ford . Cambridge : Cambridge University Press , 2020 . xx, 369 pp. ISBN: 9781108473958 (cloth). Copyright © The Association for Asian Studies, Inc., 2021 2021...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2023) 82 (4): 710–712.
Published: 01 November 2023
...Daniel Boucher The Making of Barbarians: Chinese Literature and Multilingual Asia . By Haun Saussy . Princeton, NJ : Princeton University Press , 2022 . vii, 181 pp. ISBN: 9780691231976 . © 2023 Association for Asian Studies 2023 Haun Saussy opens his thought-provoking...
Journal Article
Far Eastern Quarterly (1941) 1 (1): 59–70.
Published: 01 November 1941
... Kuo-fan and Li Hung-chang emerged as the two most powerful provincial officials in the Chinese mandarinate. Both men were forward-looking and fully realized that the sheer necessities of national existence required the Chinese to replace their traditional disdain for the “barbarian” West with a desire...
Journal Article
Far Eastern Quarterly (1942) 1 (2): 129–149.
Published: 01 February 1942
..., but vestiges of the old Chinese way of dealing with the barbarians survived much longer and today still form a considerable though latent portion of the heritage of Chinese diplomats. It is of course a truism that tribute was not exactly what it seemed, and that both diplomacy and international trade were...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1969) 28 (3): 469–488.
Published: 01 May 1969
... more on water than on land, the dominant feature of the southern landscape. In the twelfth century this river region developed a strategic importance as it became first the refuge for a besieged court, then an area of contention with barbarian invaders, and finally the principal artery of Chinese...
Journal Article
Far Eastern Quarterly (1953) 12 (3): 265–278.
Published: 01 May 1953
...John K. Fairbank Abstract Under the Confucian government of men, the Sino-barbarian dyarchy of the Ch'ing dynasty could be preserved only by a careful balancing of Chinese and Manchu personnel. Once the half-and-half division of posts had been set up at the capital after the Manchu conquest...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1959) 18 (2): 187–197.
Published: 01 February 1959
... by a consideration of what is meant by the term “lower samurai” and by the application of this to the Chōshū scene that the early Restoration movement or sonō jōi (Honor the Emperor, Expel the Barbarian) movement cannot be described as a lower samurai movement. Second, positively, I will attempt an alternate...
Journal Article
Far Eastern Quarterly (1942) 1 (4): 348–363.
Published: 01 August 1942
... in Peip'ing brought out a collection of Chinese documents relating to foreign affairs in the nineteenth century. This was entitled Ch'ou-pan i-wu shih-mo, or Docu- ments Concerning the Management of Barbarian (foreign) Affairs. Among its papers are several relating to the arrest and subsequent examination...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2014) 73 (4): 927–940.
Published: 01 November 2014
..., Vietnam, and occasionally Japan; the Inner Asia Zone consisting of the nomadic and semi-nomadic peoples of the steppes region outside the Great Wall frontier; and the Outer Zone inhabited by Wai-yi (“outer barbarians”) who are at a farther distance across land and sea—states of Southeast Asia, South...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1996) 55 (3): 725–726.
Published: 01 August 1996
... the barbarians." Alan Wood's excellent study holds that, in actuality, these thinkers, using commentary on the Spring and Autumn Annals, wished to limit the ruler's power by having him submit to higher moral authority and delegate power to them. Some Western scholars blame China's failure to evolve...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1970) 29 (2): 327–345.
Published: 01 February 1970
... the [Russian] Emperor and if everything is done according to the ideas of our Emperor, all can certainly be amicably settled. The GovernorGeneral is a very close and trusted servant of the Emperor. If the English barbarians continue with their crafty schemes and want to occupy your territory, Russia can...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1978) 37 (4): 740–741.
Published: 01 August 1978
... "barbarian" to refer to the peoples of Inner Asia, who were in no way living at a more primitive level than the average Chinese. Is there no term without the extreme pejorative associations of "barbarian"? Moses's discussion of a "barbarian world-view" (p. 64) raises the curious paradox of a people at once...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1977) 37 (1): 117.
Published: 01 November 1977
...; its purpose was to provide up-to-date reconnaissance on the maritime world, in order to aid Chinese officials charged with the management of the Western barbarians. The text is a significant one, not only because it updated Chinese geographical literature by the inclusion of information drawn from...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1964) 23 (4): 507–512.
Published: 01 August 1964
... suggest. There is yet another negative confirmation of Taoism's compatibility with Confucianism, the fact that the Taoist philosophy of nature never had the philo-barbarian (hence, obviously and hopelessly anti-Confucian) implications of the nature-philosophy of European romantics. Taoism, for all its...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2020) 79 (2): 564–565.
Published: 01 May 2020
... Remaking the Chinese Empire demands that we see these events and those that follow not as peripheral but as central. The conquest of Korea and the reimagining of Koreans as barbarians with the Jurchen-cum-Manchu as civilized was at the core of the Manchus’ empire-building project. What Wang calls...
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