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Sarah Allan. Buried Ideas: Legends of Abdication and Ideal Government in Early Chinese Bamboo-Slip Manuscripts. Albany: State University of New York Press, 2015. 372pp. ISBN 978-1-4384-5777-2 (hardcover: US$ 95,00); ISBN 978-1-4384-5778-9 (US$ 29,95)


Seiten 167 - 171

DOI https://doi.org/10.13173/jasiahist.50.1.0167




1 Angus C. Graham, Disputers of the Tao: Philosophical Argument in Ancient China (La Salle: Open Court, 1989), 293.

2 I have analyzed The Way of Yao and Shun and two other abdication-related manuscripts in Yuri Pines, “Disputers of Abdication: Zhanguo Egalitarianism and the Sovereign's Power,” T'oung Pao 91.4–5 (2005): 243–300, and “Subversion Unearthed: Criticism of Hereditary Succession in the Newly Discovered Manuscripts,” Oriens Extremus 45 (2005–2006): 159–178.

3 Qiu Xigui 裘錫圭, “Tan tan Shangbo jian Zigao pian de jian xu” 談談上博簡《子羔》篇的簡序, in Shangbo guan cang Zhanguo Chu zhushu yanjiu xubian 上博舘藏戰國楚竹書研究續編, ed. Shanghai daxue gudai wenming yanjiu zhongxin 上海大學古代文明研究中心 and Qinghua daxue sixiang wenhua yanjiu suo 清華大學思想文化研究所 (Shanghai: Shanghai shudian, 2004), 1–11

4 Yu, Xie, and Houji were all reportedly employed either during Yao's reign (when Shun acted as a chief minister), or directly under Shun.

5 For my treatment of the Rongchengshi, see Pines, “Political Mythology and Dynastic Legitimacy in the Rong Cheng shi manuscript,” Bulletin of the School of Oriental and Asian Studies, 73.3 (2010), 503–529.

6 Guo Yongbing 郭永秉, Di xi xin yan: Chu di chutu Zhanguo wenxian zhong de chuanshuo shidai gu diwang xitong yanjiu 帝係新研:楚地出土戰國文獻中的傳説時代古帝王系統研究 (Beijing: Beijing daxue, 2008), 43–79.

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