22,217 research outputs found
Shanghai Yü ying tang zheng xin lu.
Caption title.; Special collection from London Missionary Society.; On double leaves, oriental style, in case.; Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at http://nla.gov.au/nla.gen-vn389180.880-02 Yü ying tang zheng xin lu
Tang, Ying Lam, [No Service Number]
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/420360Surname: TANG. Given Name(s) or Initials: YING LAM. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: [No Registration Number]. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 49737.244945
Item: [2016.0049.52621] "Tang, Ying Lam, [No Service Number]
Shanghai Qi liu jü, Tong ren tang, Yü ying tang shang chuan jüan zheng xin lu.
Cover title.; Special collection from London Missionary Society.; On double leaves, oriental style, in case.; Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at http://nla.gov.au/nla.gen-vn389068.880-02 Shang chuan jüan zheng xin lu
Materiality of glass.
Tang Sin Ying."Architecture Department, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Master of Architecture Programme 2004-2005, design report.
A Psychoanalytical Interpretation of Ying-ying’s Contradiction
This study investigates Yuan Zhen’s “The Story of Ying-ying” (“Yingying Zhuan”) by means of Sigmund Freud’s psychoanalysis. From a psychoanalytic perspective, Ying ying faces internal struggles between the ego and the id caused by her superego-this leads to her inconsistent behaviours. This contradiction encapsulates how any reasonable person would have felt, thus having an epoch-marking significance. Poems composed based on their love affair also reveal the social role of scholars under the reality principle, the underlying basis for the desertion of Ying-ying. Interpretation of the story using a combination of tale and poetry expands the Tang literati discourse on Ying-ying’s contradictory behaviours
Ying Chen\u27s Impressions of Summer
Chapbook of narrative/personal poems by Ying Chen originally published by Finishing Line Press in 2013. Translated from the French by Peter Schulman, ODU Professor of French and International Studies.https://digitalcommons.odu.edu/worldlanguages_books/1016/thumbnail.jp
Administration, Savoir Technique et Reconnaissance Impériale Tang Ying 唐英 (1682–1756)
International audienceCet article éclaire la carrière de Tang Ying 唐英 (1682-1756), un des premiers administrateurs impériaux à la cour de Chine, à partir de pièces d'archives du Bureau des travaux du Palais de la Maison impériale chargé de la fabrication d'oeuvres d'art à la commande personnelle des empereurs. L'auteur observe la naissance d'une élite et donne à comprendre pourquoi et comment une expertise technique dans le domaine des arts a servi l'ultime dessein politique des empereurs mandchous
Reassessment of the taxonomic status of Craseomys and three controversial species of Myodes and Alticola (Rodentia: Arvicolinae)
Tang, Ming Kun, Jin, Wei, Tang, Ying, Yan, Chao Chao, Murphy, Robert W., Sun, Zhi Yu, Zhang, Xiu Yue, Zeng, Tao, Liao, Rui, Hou, Quan Fen, Yue, Bi Song, Liu, Shao Ying (2018): Reassessment of the taxonomic status of Craseomys and three controversial species of Myodes and Alticola (Rodentia: Arvicolinae). Zootaxa 4429 (1): 1-52, DOI: https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4429.1.
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The Rise of Technocratic Culture in High-Qing China: A Case Study of Bondservant (Booi) Tang Ying (1682-1756)
This dissertation examines a technologically specialized officialdom of Manchu called bondservants (or booi) that thrived in the eighteenth century. Through a case study of Tang Ying (1682--1756), a supervisor of the Imperial Porcelain Manufacture and a prolific playwright, I demonstrate the formation of what I call a "technocratic epistemology" across disparate fields of technical, artistic, and literary production. One of my key arguments is that bondservants differed from traditional Han scholar-officials in their practical approach to technological knowledge and their expanded literary representation of intercultural experiences in the multiethnic empire. Both contributed to the practice of statecraft that is modern in nature.
In research questions and method, this project lies at the intersection of the history of technology, literature, and material culture. Tang Ying's case not only provides a vintage point for observing a technocrat's lineage, training, and career path, it also allows us to view the Qing empire from such previously little-studied vantage points as manufacture, technical knowledge, and fiscal management. This case study adopts a mobile perspective, following Tang's multiple journeys across the empire, often traversing social and ethnic boundaries.
By closely analyzing Tang Ying's technical treatises, literary compositions and extant porcelains, I show a two-fold principle governing three aspects of technocratic cultural production. First, Tang Ying's illustrated treatise shows how bondservants appropriated non-textual knowledge of craftsmen and merchants into statecraft by means of writing and images. Second, Tang Ying's development of porcelain technology showcases how technocrats experimented with knowledge encoded in texts, images and tools. Third, documentary and experimental imperatives governed the literary and artistic compositions of bondservants. For Tang Ying, to document meant not only to record information but also to compartmentalize, to count, and to order information systematically.
This dissertation sheds light on the central institutionalization of practical expertise in the expanding multiethnic empire of China. Trained for the projects of empire building, bondservants integrated the skills and practices of scholar-officials, artisans and merchants to give birth to a technocratic culture
Vacrothele palpator Tang & Wu & Zhao & Yang 2022, comb. nov.
Vacrothele palpator (Pocock, 1901), comb. nov. Figs 11–12, 16B, 17D, 18D, 19 Macrothele palpator Pocock, 1901: 213, pl. 21, fig. 4; Hu & Li, 1986: 11 (1), figs 8–11; Feng, 1990: 27 (2), figs 1–5; Song, Zhu & Chen, 1999: 39, figs 17 D–F; Yin et al., 2012: 142, fig. Type material. Holotype, male, 60 miles uphill from Ningbo, China. Coll. by P. W. Bassett-Smith, Esq, Surgeon R. N. Paratypes: male, female, from Hongkong, coll. by J. C. Bowring; Da Lan San, 60 miles uphill from Ningbo, coll. by P. W. Bassett-Smith, Esq, Surgeon R. N. Description: See Yin et al (2012). Examined material. 1♀, Longkangtou, Bataishan scenic spot, Meitan City, Guizhou Province, 16 August, 2020, coll. by Y. N. Tang Y. M. You & L. J. Ding. 4♂, 11♀, Pu County, Meitan City, Guizhou Province, N27º54′1″, E107º38′22″, 760m, 14 October 2021, coll. by Z. Z. Yang & Y. Y. Wu. 1♂, 1♀, Shawen browse Road, Yuanzhou District, Yichun City, Jiangxi Province, 28 February 2020, coll. by Y. N. Tang. 1♀, Yuanshan Park, Yichun City, Jiangxi Province, 1 January 2020, coll. by Y. N. Tang. 1♂, Tumenguan, Sangxi town, Yang County, Shanxi Province, China, E107º55′31.4″, N33º17′6.65′′, 20 October 2020, coll. by L. Y. Wang. 1♀, Muyu Town, Shennongjia, Hebei Province, E110º28′43.05″, N31º23′46.45″, 25 October 2020, coll. by L. Y. Wang. All materials of examined species are deposited in DUIER. Distribution: China: (Hong Kong, Zhejiang, Guizhou, Hubei, Jiangxi).Published as part of Tang, Ya-Ni, Wu, Ya-Ying, Zhao, Yu & Yang, Zi-Zhong, 2022, Description of a new genus and two new species of the funnel-web mygalomorph (Araneae: Mygalomorphae: Macrothelidae) from China with notes on taxonomic amendments, pp. 513-535 in Zootaxa 5125 (5) on pages 518-519, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5125.5.3, http://zenodo.org/record/645731
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