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Technical Arts in the Han Histories: Tables and Treatises in the Shiji and Hanshu

Technical Arts in the Han Histories: Tables and Treatises in the Shiji and Hanshu

Mark Csikszentmihalyi
0/5 ( ratings)
While cultural literacy in early China was grounded in learning the Classics, basic competence in official life was generally predicated on acquiring several forms of technical knowledge. Recent archaeological finds have brought renewed attention to the use of technical manuals and mantic techniques within a huge range of discrete contexts, pushing historians to move beyond the generalities offered by past scholarship. To explore these uses, Technical Arts in the Han Histories delves deeply into the rarely studied Treatises and Tables compiled for the first two standard histories, the Shiji and Hanshu , important supplements to the better-known biographical chapters, and models for the inclusion of technical subjects in the twenty-three later Standard Histories of imperial China. Indeed, for a great many aspects of life in early imperial society, they constitute our best primary sources for understanding complex realities and perceptions. The essays in this volume seek to explain how different social groups thought of, disseminated, and withheld technical knowledge relating to the body, body politic, and cosmos, in the process of detailing the preoccupations of successive courts from Qin through Eastern Han in administering the localities, the frontier zones, and their numerous subjects .
Pages
400
Format
Hardcover
Publisher
State University of New York Press
Release
September 01, 2021
ISBN
1438485433
ISBN 13
9781438485430

Technical Arts in the Han Histories: Tables and Treatises in the Shiji and Hanshu

Mark Csikszentmihalyi
0/5 ( ratings)
While cultural literacy in early China was grounded in learning the Classics, basic competence in official life was generally predicated on acquiring several forms of technical knowledge. Recent archaeological finds have brought renewed attention to the use of technical manuals and mantic techniques within a huge range of discrete contexts, pushing historians to move beyond the generalities offered by past scholarship. To explore these uses, Technical Arts in the Han Histories delves deeply into the rarely studied Treatises and Tables compiled for the first two standard histories, the Shiji and Hanshu , important supplements to the better-known biographical chapters, and models for the inclusion of technical subjects in the twenty-three later Standard Histories of imperial China. Indeed, for a great many aspects of life in early imperial society, they constitute our best primary sources for understanding complex realities and perceptions. The essays in this volume seek to explain how different social groups thought of, disseminated, and withheld technical knowledge relating to the body, body politic, and cosmos, in the process of detailing the preoccupations of successive courts from Qin through Eastern Han in administering the localities, the frontier zones, and their numerous subjects .
Pages
400
Format
Hardcover
Publisher
State University of New York Press
Release
September 01, 2021
ISBN
1438485433
ISBN 13
9781438485430

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