The Ming Studies Research Series, published by the Society for Ming Studies and distributed by the Center for Early Modern History, is an outlet for scholarly works related to the study of Ming history.
No. 6 |
A Late Ming Vision for Local Community: |
Jaret Wayne Weisfogel, edited by Sarah Schneewind |
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Guan Zhidao (1536-1608) was a Confucian thinker who was anxious to counter the moral confusion and social decay that accompanied the profound commercialization and urbanization occurring around the end of the Ming Dynasty. As Weisfogel puts it, "Guan Zhidao's world was falling apart." Guan Zhidao's response to this crisis was put forward in the form of "Proposals for Following the Men of Former Times to Safeguard Customs." Weisfogel's book is the first major scholarly study of Guan Zhidao and the only account in English of a late Ming thinker who has received less attention than many better-known contemporaries. A promising young scholar in the field of Chinese intellectual history, Jaret Weisfogel wrote this book as a doctoral student at Columbia University. Tragically, he died of an illness shortly after its completion. Publication of this edited version was made possible by the support of the Weisfogel family and the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures of Columbia University. ISBN 978-0-9800639-2-9, (hardcover), 2010, 194 pages. |
No. 5 |
Local Administration in Ming China: |
Thomas G. Nimick |
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Thomas G. Nimick, a leading authority on Ming government, draws on Chinese sources to provide the most detailed account of local Ming government available in English. Rational bureaucratic administration is one of China's greatest contributions to the art of governance. After centuries of evolution, the Chinese civil service system reached new heights during the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644). Local Administration in Ming China traces the origins and evolution of the lowest level of administrative offices over the course of the dynasty. It starts with the Ming founder's experiments with using members of the local elite to collect taxes and goes on to the increased reliance on magistrates and prefects sent out from the center. The story concludes with the fiscal problems at the end of the dynasty. ISBN 978-0980063912 (hardcover), 2008, 205 pages. |
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No. 4 |
Long Live the Emperor! |
Edited by Sarah Schneewind |
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The founder of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), Zhu Yuanzhang, was one of the most colorful rulers in China's long imperial history. His rise from poverty, participation in a millenarian movement, expulsion of the Mongols, unification of the empire, three decades of tumultuous rule, paranoia, and bloody purges are all the stuff of legend. Ever since his death in 1398 popular stories and more formal accounts from across East Asia have sought to make sense of the Ming founder and deploy his memory for a wide range of uses. Long Live the Emperor! brings together twenty essays examining how his stormy career has been interpreted in politics, the arts, outside of China, and in our own time. Sarah Schneewind conceived the idea of surveying the historiographical heritage of the Ming founder and brought together a constellation of specialist, each with a different story to tell. ISBN 978-0980063905 (hardcover), 2008, 508 pages. |
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No. 3 |
Ming History: |
Edward L. Farmer, Romeyn Taylor, and Ann Waltner |
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This work contains sections on the basics of Ming history research, selected documents with vocabulary notes, and handy reference aids. ISBN 978-1886108028 (paperback), 1994, 451 pages. |
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No. 2 |
Ming Studies in Japan 1961-1981: |
Richard T. Wang |
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Classified, unannotated entries in Japanese with authors' names in romanization. A romanized index of authors' names is included. Note: This work is superseded by Min daishi kenkyu bunken mokuroku, edited by Yamane Yukio (Tokyo, 1993). ISBN 1886108013 (paperback), 1985, 108 pages. |
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No. 1 |
A Synchronic Chinese-Western Daily Calendar 1341-1661 A.D. |
Keith Hazelton |
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This work provides lunar and solar equivalents for every day in the span of years indicated. Lunar days are indicated in Wade-Giles romanization. ISBN 978-1886108004 (paperback), 1984, 328 pages.
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