9,476 research outputs found
Rugao Mao shi cong shu /
Double leaves, oriental style, in case.Blockprint.v. 1 Chang chao min xian sheng nian pu -- v. 2-5 Chaomin shi ji : 6 juan / Mao Xiang zhuan -- v. 6 Fu ren ji zhu : 1 juan / Chen Jisong zhuan ; Mao Bao zhu. Zhu cuo xuan shi ji / Mao Bao. Han bi tang shi ji -- v. 7-8 Pu chao wen xuan : 4 juan -- v. 8 Ying mei an yi yu -- v. 9 Xiang li yuan ou cun. Han pi ku yin. Ji mei ren ming shi. Fan xue xiao cao. Lan Yan. Zhen cha hui chao. Xuan lu ge zhu -- v. 10 Zhen yan tang shi ji. Shen yuan shi shuo : 4 juan -- v. 11 Qian hou yuan xi yan ji shi : 2 juan. Chen kan lu -- v. 12-15 Rugao Mao shi shi lue : 14 juan -- v. 16 Xie kang le ji shi yi / Xie ling yun. Xie kang le xiao shen ji. He xie kang le shi -- v. 17-19 Xiao san wu ting wen jia ji -- v. 18 Kuan liu chi / Wang Guan-- v. 20 Zhe shi shi lu / Zhou Murun zhuan. Ren an yi gao / Zhou Yuexiu zhuan. Chuan zhong tang xue gu wen / Zhou Xingjian zhuan -- v. 21 Ou tang sheng gao / Zhou Xingyu zhuan. Dong ou cao tang ci : 2 juan / Zhou Xingyu zhuan. [?]Kuang shi zhi / Zhou Xingyi. Wai jia ji wen.Mode of access: Internet
Du Fu in the Literary Works of Mao Xiang
Mao Xiang (1611–1693), a man of letters from the late Ming and early Qing periods, is famous for Reminiscences of the Convent of Shadowy Plum-blossoms, a memoir of his concubine Dong Xiao-wan. Reading his literary works, we find that he had quite an interest in the Tang Dynasty poet Du Fu (712-770) as, among other things, he comments on Du Fu, quotes from his poems and composes his own poems using the same rhyming style. (改行) In this paper, I examine the literary works of Mao Xiang related to Du Fu\u27s poems. (改行) In his preface to an anthology of Du Fu\u27s poems, Mao Xiang states his enthusiasm for Du Fu\u27s work. Mao personally faced great hardship during the troubled times of the Manchu conquest. In fact, Du Fu himself lived a life fraught with worry, especially during the An Lu-shan Rebellion. The similarities he felt between their experiences led Mao not only to sympathize with Du Fu but also to compose poems using the same style
The portrayal of women in Mao Dun's early fiction 1927-1932
It is the prevailing critical assessment of Mao Dun's early creative writing that he displays a singular insight in his portrayal of women. This thesis seeks not only to challenge this assessment by a predominantly male body of criticism but also the assumptions on which it is based, namely that an intellectual sympathy for the women’s cause necessarily implies a transcendence of the patriarchal attitudes with which society is imbued. The major short stories and novellas written between 1927 and 1932 are analysed systematically to identify Mao Dun's underlying attitudes towards women. His portrayal of women is assessed from the following perspectives:~ his autobiographical accounts of his encounters with women in his political and personal life and his deliberate association of his female comrades with his creative inspiration;- traditional Chinese perceptions of women and gender roles as these are manifested in the classical tradition;-- Mao Dun's numerous articles and essays on the women's question written during the nineteen twenties and his work in the women's section of the Party in Shanghai;- Mao Dun's attempt to reconcile his conflicting sympathies for feminism and socialism. This thesis relies for its methodology on Western feminist criticism. While the approach is maintained, in its application to the context of early twentieth century China, its eurocentrism in terms of cultural assumptions and perceptions of gender has been replaced by a definition of Chinese values. Since a fundamental prerequisite, of feminist criticism is the assessment of the writer in his/her own cultural context, a historical survey of the portrayal of women in traditional literature is provided to serve as a standard against which to measure Mao Dun’s portrayal
Pseudokuzicus (Similkuzicus) Fu-Ming & Mao & Chang 2007, subgen. nov.
Similkuzicus subgen. nov. Type species: Pseudokuzicus (Similkuzicus) quadridentatus sp.nov. Body small. Fastigium of vertex conical, apex faintly obtuse, with thin longitudinal furrow. Compound eyes round, protruding obviously. Apical segment of maxillary palpi distinctly longer than subapical one, apex strongly enlarged. Pronotum with almost straight anterior margin, posterior margin angularly rounded, prolonged backwards and covered stridulatory area of tegmina, metazona flattened, humeral sinus absent. Tegmina abbreviated, not reaching apex of posterior femur, but slightly exceeding abdominal apex, hind wings shorter than tegmina. Tenth abdominal with a pair of small or colliculose processes. Cerci separated into external and internal processes, internal one with thin apex, external process longer than internal one. Titillator sclerotized obviously, comparatively small, apex with two or four thin spines. Subgenital plate relatively large, posterior margin with triangular medial notch. Without styli. Female subgenital plate transverse, posterior margin widen in centre part. Ovipositor slightly shorter, curved upwards.Published as part of Fu-Ming, Shi, Mao, Shao-Li & Chang, Yan-Lin, 2007, A review of the genus Pseudokuzicus Gorochov, 1993 (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae: Meconematidae), pp. 23-30 in Zootaxa 1546 (1) on page 29, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.1546.1.3, http://zenodo.org/record/508882
The Reception of Mao\u27s \u27Talks at the Yan\u27an Forum on Literature and Art\u27 in English-language Scholarship
In his article The Reception of Mao\u27s \u27Talks at the Yan\u27an Forum on Literature and Art\u27 in English-language Scholarship Qilin Fu examines the three waves of the reception of Mao Zedong\u27s 1942 text. Fu elaborates on the understandings of Mao\u27s ideas about literature and art and discusses the changes depending on historical and political contexts. Fu argues that the changes are explicit or implicit representations of cultural politics ranging from an anti-communist criticism based on Cold War ideology to the concerns of literary theory and the cultural critique of discourse in the context of globalization
Houcun ti ba: si juan. v.1
[V.1-2]. 後邨題跋 / 劉克莊撰 -- [v.2]. 海岳題跋 / 米芾撰.[V.1-2]. Houcun ti ba / Liu Kezhuang zhuan -- [v.2]. Haiyue ti ba / Mi Fu zhuan.劉克莊撰 ; 毛晉訂. 海岳題跋 / 米芾撰 ; 毛晉訂.綫裝, 1函.框19.3x13.6公分, 8行19字, 白口, 無魚尾, 左右雙邊, 版心上鐫題名, 中鐫卷次及葉次, 下鐫"汲古閣".書根印有"津逮拾叁集".鈐有"孝經樓"印.Xian zhuang, 1 han.Kuang 19.3 x 13.6 gong fen, 8 hang 19 zi, bai kou, wu yu wei, zuo you shuang bian, ban xin shang juan ti ming, zhong juan juan ci ji ye ci, xia juan "Ji gu ge".Shu gen yin you "Jin dai shi san ji".Liu Kezhuang zhuan ; Mao Jin ding. Haiyue ti ba / Mi Fu zhuan ; Mao Jin ding.Qian you "Xiao jing lou" yin
Paraxizicus spathulata Mao & Shi 2007
5. Paraxizicus spathulata Mao & Shi, 2007 Paraxizicus spathulata Mao & Shi, 2007: 67 –68. Material examined. Holotype: male, Lianhuaping, Leishan, Guizhou, China, 14 Sept. 2005, collected by Hao-Yu Liu. Paratypes: 7 males and 4 females, Fanjingshan, Guizhou, China, 31 July 2001 – 4 August 2001, collected by Fu-Ming Shi. 1 male, Heiwan, Jiangkou, Guizhou, China, 3 August 2001, collected by Guo-Dong Ren. Distribution. CHINA (Guizhou).Published as part of Shi, Fu-Ming, Bian, Xun & Chang, Yan-Lin, 2011, Notes on the genus Paraxizicus Gorochov & Kang, 2007 (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae: Meconematinae) from China, pp. 37-45 in Zootaxa 2896 on page 39, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.20669
Conanalus robustus Shi, Mao & Ou 2008
Conanalus robustus Shi, Mao & Ou, 2008 http://lsid.speciesfile.org/urn:lsid: Orthoptera.speciesfile.org:TaxonName: 16610 Figure 3 A–D, Map 1 Conanalus robustus Shi, Mao & Ou, 2008. Zootaxa, 1949: 35; Eades, Otte, Cigliano & Braun, 2015: Orthoptera Species File Online (Version 5.0/5.0). Material examined. Holotype: male, Puer, Simao, Yunnan, 30 July 2007, collected by Fu-Ming Shi and Shao-Li Mao; paratypes: 2 males and 1 female, other data as holotype. The other specimens: 2 females, Puer, Yunnan, 28 July 2007, collected by Ji-Shan Xu; 2 males and 1 female, Puer, Yunnan, 28 July 2007, collected by Ben-Yong Mao. Distribution. China (Yunnan).Published as part of Du, Bao-Jie, Song, Qiong & Shi, Fu-Ming, 2015, Notes on the genus Conanalus Tinkham, 1943 (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae: Conocephalinae) with one new species from Yunnan, China, pp. 577-582 in Zootaxa 3964 (5) on page 580, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3964.5.8, http://zenodo.org/record/23202
Paraxizicus spathulata Mao & Shi, sp. nov.
5. Paraxizicus spathulata Mao & Shi sp. nov. (Figs. 2 –8, 10, Plates A, B) Male (figs. 3 –6, 10). Body medium size. Fastigium verticis conical, apex obtuse, dorsally weakly furrowed. Compound eyes subglobose, protruding. Maxillary palpi long, apical segment of maxillary palpi little longer than subapical one, distally faintly inflated. Anterior margin of pronotum almost straight, posterior margin angularly rounded prolonged; posterior transverse sulcus almost in the middle, distinct; lateral lobes of pronotum longer than high (length 2.43 mm, height 1.89 mm), posterior margin slightly oblique, humeral sinus inconspicuous. Thoracic auditory spiracle completely free. Tegmina long, distinctly surpassing apices of posterior femora. Hind wings slightly longer than tegmina. All femora unarmed. Anterior coaxe with one spine; anterior tibiae with open auditory organs on both sides, with 5 spines both on internal and external ventral margins, external spines longer than internal ones. Posterior tibiae with 26 to 27 spines and a pair of distal spurs on both dorsal margins, ventral margins with 9 external spines and 3 internal spines and two pairs of distal spines. Tenth abdominal tergite with a process, directing upwards, apex bifurcate. Sclerotized part of tenth abdominal tergite rather narrow in the middle, separated from epiproct by triangular membranous area. Epiproct simple, semi-membranous. Cerci stout in basal half, subapical part spathulate, apex bifurcate. Subgenital plate subtrapezoided, with a medial carina, styli thin and long. Female (figs.2, 7, 11). Body similar to male in general. Cerci conical, with thin apex. Subgenital plate relatively small, posterior margin with a small medial projection. Ovipositor thin and long, distinctly surpassing posterior femora, faintly curved dorsad, ventral valvula with small hooked apex.Published as part of Mao, Shao-Li & Shi, Fu-Ming, 2007, A review of the genus Paraxizicus Gorochov & Kang, 2005 (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae: Meconematinae), pp. 63-68 in Zootaxa 1474 on page 67, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.17673
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