1,722,139 research outputs found
Rheotanytarsus apiculus Wang & Guo 2004
Rheotanytarsus apiculus Wang & Guo, 2004 Rheotanytarsus apiculus Wang & Guo, 2004: 11 Specimen examined. Holotype male (BDN No. 07458), China, Yunnan Province, Jinghong Country. 3. iv. 1987. Leg. H. Zou, sweep net. Diagnosis. This species can be separated from other members of the group by the following combination of characters: anal point long and narrow, anal crest reduced. Distribution. China (Yunnan).Published as part of Liu, Wen-Bin, Yao, Yuan, Chang, Tong, Yan, Chun-Cai & Lin, Xiao-Long, 2022, Contribution to the knowledge of Rheotanytarsus pellucidus species group from China (Diptera, Chironomidae): three new and one newly recorded species, pp. 145-156 in Zootaxa 5188 (2) on page 154, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5188.2.4, http://zenodo.org/record/708754
Wang Guo-wei and Suzuki Torao : The Kyoto Years
This paper explores the relationship between the early modern Chinese scholar Wang Guo-wei 王國維 and Suzuki Torao 鈴木虎雄, one of the founders of Japanese Sinology. An examination of their interaction will add to the discussion concerning Japanese and Chinese scholarship and cultural history. Suzuki Torao's interest in the research of Zaju 雑劇 by Wang Guo-wei was not merely coincidental. At the time, Japanese scholars were cosciously begining research on Zaju for the first time. In order to clarify Suzuki's motive for working with Wang, this paper will look back on Japanese Sinology from Meiji 30 (1987). Fleeing the Revolution of 1911, Wang Guo-wei and Luo Zhen-yu 羅振玉 came to live in Kyôto. After meeting Suzuki, Wang enjoyed a close and many-faceted scholarly relationship with him. Moreover, they often exchanged poetry. From their poems, we not only get a glimpse of their artistic relationship, we can also see the political and cultural trends of Japanese scholarship when it encountered the thinking of Chinese minds such as Luo Zhen-yu and Wang, and note the respective influences and changes. This paper relies primarily on the surviving Suzuki-Wang documents to make an investigation of scholarship and cultural-historical problems in Japanese-Chinese relations. I also examine the personal lives of the two men and note similarities. Finally I will introduce six previously unknown letters from Wang to Suzuki. In addition, I will discuss the relation of these six letters to nine other of Wang's letters which were recently published
Conscious Activity --the Literary Criticism of Wang Guo-wei
Wang Guo-wei claims that the most important element of literature is feelings with a natural tongue. At first sight, it seems to be a common knowledge. However, writers are easily conformed to the stereotyped method of their contemporaries, it is quite difficult for a writer to express one's feelings freshly and unconventionally. Wang Guo-wei also emphasizes the importance of individual feelings which reflect the truth of "particulars" regardless of its unabsoluteness and temporariness. Wang has once attempted to search for a "universal" truth through studying German philosophy, however he gives up finally. In his research of Chinese literature, particularly Ren Jian Ci Hua (人間詞話) and Song Yuan Xi Qu Kao (宋元戲曲考), he attaches great importance to serious feelings which appear in every fragment of real life. In Song Yuan Xi Qu Kao, he declares: "They (Yuan playwrights) merely copied down the emotions in their breasts and recorded the circumstances of the age, with the result that frequently genuine truths and an elegant style can be found in their works."1) 1) translated by Joey Bonner
An Encounter of Two Cultures : Luo Zhen-yu, Wang Guo-wei and the Academic Circles in Meiji
In this paper some aspects of various modern Sino-Japanese academic exchanges centering on Nongxuebao and Dongwenxueshe and their significance examined by focusing on Luo Zhen-yu, Wang Guo-wei and Fujita Toyohachi's carly academic years, little of which has been dealt with in the previous studies
Conscious Activity (II) --the historical studies of Wang Guo-wei
Generally speaking, the studies of Wang Guo-wei are divided into two periods of time, which is before or after the Xin-hai Ge-ming (辛亥革命). Before Xin-hai Ge-ming, he was considered to be the vanguard of the new era, trying to change the status quo in China. During this period of time, he felt a strong interest on the problem of "universal" in the field of philosophy and literature. On the other hand, in "Song Yuan Xi Qu Kao" (宋元戲曲考) which was regarded to be his best work, he tried to search for the essence of literature. In both cases, he refused to use a quick and easy method just to solve the present occasion. After Xin-hai Ge-ming, he turned to study ancient Chinese history. In his research, he was particular about trivial facts and developed many theories which was criticized as not concerning with the status quo in China. However, this change did not mean that he had shut himself away in the field of ancient China. In many writings on Yin Zhou (殷周) and the Western Regions (西域), such as "Liu Sha Zhui jian" (流沙墜簡), "Yin Xu Shu Qi Kao Shi (殷墟書契考釋)", "Yin Bu Ci Zhong Suo Jian Xian Wang Xian Gong Kao" (殷卜辭中所見先王先公考), "Meng Gu Kao" (萌古考), he confirmed to the idea that the development of Chinese culture had no limits. This is nothing but his fundamental standpoint relating to China. Wang Guo-wei regarded the historical change as inevitable, which meaned various attempts to create a new social system and tradition. Moreover, he based on this idea to take a new look at the past history of China. The comparison of excavated articles and well-known documents formed a new connection among each age. Therefore, Chinese history was no longer just a passage of time; but has great impacts on many preconceived ideas
Four new species of the family Diptilomiopidae (Acari: Eriophyoidea) from China
Wang, Guo-Quan, Wei, Sui-Gai, Yang, Ding (2010): Four new species of the family Diptilomiopidae (Acari: Eriophyoidea) from China. Zootaxa 2442: 39-50, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19500
Three new species of Phyllocoptinae (Acari: Eriophyidae) from South China
Li, De-Wei, Wang, Guo-Quan, Wei, Sui-Gai (2009): Three new species of Phyllocoptinae (Acari: Eriophyidae) from South China. Zootaxa 2205: 62-68, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.18972
Three new species and a new name in Diptilomiopinae from China (Acari: Diptilomiopidae)
Wang, Guo-Quan, Wei, Sui-Gai, Yang, Ding (2009): Three new species and a new name in Diptilomiopinae from China (Acari: Diptilomiopidae). Zootaxa 2015: 55-61, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.18592
Three new species of Nothopodinae (Acari, Eriophyidae) from China
Wang, Guo-Quan, Wei, Sui-Gai, Yang, Ding (2013): Three new species of Nothopodinae (Acari, Eriophyidae) from China. Zoosystema 35 (1): 25-33, DOI: 10.5252/z2013n1a3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.5252/z2013n1a
A new mesopterous species of the genus Phryganogryllacris (Orthoptera Gryllacrididae: Hyperbaeninae) from Shandong, China
Yin, Zi-Xu, Wang, Guo-Li, Shen, Zi-Hao (2021): A new mesopterous species of the genus Phryganogryllacris (Orthoptera Gryllacrididae: Hyperbaeninae) from Shandong, China. Zootaxa 4915 (2): 282-288, DOI: https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4915.2.
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