In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • Bibliography of English Language Sources, 1996 – 2002 : Five Dynasties, Liao, Song, Xi Xia, Jin, and Yuan
  • Michael C. McGrath
Michael C. McGrath
Adrian College
Adler, Joseph. Chu Hsi’s Introduction to the Study of the Classic of Change (I-hsüeh ch’i-meng). NY: Global Scholarly Publications, 2002.
———. “The Interpretation of Stillness and Activity in Chu Hsi’s Appropriation of Chou Tun-i.” In Abstracts of the 1999 Annual Meeting, 61. Ann Arbor, MI: Association for Asian Studies, 1999.
Ahn, Jee Won. “An Interpretation on the Peculiarities of Sakra Buddhist Rituals in the Koryo Dynasty (918–1392).” In Abstracts of the 2002 Annual Meeting, 62. Ann Arbor, MI: Association for Asian Studies, 2002.
Allen, Joseph R. “Standing on a Corner in Twelfth Century China: A Semiotic Reading of a Frozen Moment in the Qingming shanghe tu.” Journal of Song-Yuan Studies 27 (1997): 109–125.
Allsen, Thomas T. Commodity and Exchange in the Mongol Empire. Cambridge Series in Islamic Civilization. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997.
“Aluzhen (ca. 1217, northeast China).” Chinese Studies in History 35.2 (Winter 2001): 54.
Anderson, James Adams. “Frontier Management and Tribute Relations Along the Empire’s Southern Border: China and Vietnam in the 10th and 11th Centuries.” Ph.D. diss., University of Washington, 1999.
———. “Tempting ‘Treacherous Factions’: The Manipulation of Frontier Alliances in the Breakdown of Sino-Vietnamese Relations on the Eve of 1075 Border War.” In Abstracts of the 2002 Annual Meeting, 335. Ann Arbor, MI: Association for Asian Studies, 2002.
Anonymous. “The Story of Li Shishi (Anonymous, Song Dynasty).” Chinese Literature 394 (August 2000): 61–68.
Armijo-Hussein, Jacqueline. “The Origins of Confucian and Islamic Education in [End Page 173] Southwest China: Yunnan in the Yuan Period.” In Abstracts of the 1998 Annual Meeting, 14. Ann Arbor, MI: Association for Asian Studies, 1998.
Atwell, William S. “Volcanism and Short-Term Climatic Change in East Asian and World History, c.1200 to 1699.” Journal of World History 12.1 (Spring 2001): 29–98.
Atwood, Christopher. “‘A Singular Conformity?’ The Origin and Nature of the Mongol Imperial Religious Policy.” In Abstracts of the 2002 Annual Meeting, 14. Ann Arbor, MI: Association for Asian Studies, 2002.
Bai, Qianshen. “The Artistic and Intellectual Dimensions of Chinese Calligraphy Rubbings: Some Examples from the Collection of Robert Hatfield Ellsworth.” Orientations 30.3 (Mar 99): 82–88.
———. “Image as Word: A Study of Rebus Play in Song Painting (960–1279).” Metropolitan Museum Journal 34 (1999): 57–72.
Baldrian-Hussein, Farzeen. “Alchemy and Self-Cultivation in Literary Circles of the Northern Song Dynasty.” Cahiers d’Extême-Asie 9 (1996–7): 15–53.
Barnhart, Richard M. “The Five Dynasties (907–960) and the Song Period (960–1279).” In Three Thousand Years of Chinese Painting, edited by Richard Barnhardt et al., 84–137. New Haven and Beijing: Yale University Press and Foreign Languages Press, 1997.
———. “The Spurious Controversy over ‘The Riverbank.’” Orientations 28 (December 1997): 86.
———. “Three Song Landscape Paintings.” Orientations 29.2 (February 1998): 54–61.
———. “Patriarchs in Another Age: In Search of Style and Meaning in Two Sung-Yuan Paintings.” In Arts of the Sung and Yuan: Ritual, Ethnicity, and Style in Painting, edited by Cary Y. Liu and Dora C. Y. Ching, 12–37. Princeton: The Art Museum, Princeton University. 1999.
Bernhardt, Kathryn. “The Inheritance Rights of Daughters: The Song Anomaly,” Modern China 21.3 (July 1995): 269–309.
———. Women and Property in China, 960–1949. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1999.
Besio, Kimberly. “Zhang Fei in Yuan Vernacular Literature: Legend, Heroism, and History in the Reproduction of the Three Kingdoms Story Cycle.” Journal of Song-Yuan Studies 27 (1997): 63–98.
———. “From Stage to Page: Moments in the Textual Reproduction of Two Yuan Plays.” In Abstracts of the 1997 Annual Meeting, 32. Ann Arbor, MI: Association for Asian Studies, 1997.
Beuer, Rudiger Walter. “Early Chinese Vernacular Literature and the Oral-Literary Continuum: The Example of Song-Yuan dynasties pinghua.” Ph.D. diss., Washington University, 2002. [End Page 174]
Bickford, Maggie. Ink Plum...

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