The Embodied Text
豆瓣
Establishing Textual Identity in Early Chinese Manuscripts
Matthias L. Richter
简介
In The Embodied Text Matthias L. Richter offers an exemplary study of a 300 BCE Chinese manuscript, exploring significant differences between the Warring States manuscript text and its transmitted early imperial counterparts. These differences reveal the adaptation of the text to a changed political environment as well as general ideological developments. This study further demonstrates how the physical embodiment of the text in the manuscript reflects modes of textual formation and social uses of written texts.
AAS Joseph Levenson Book Prize (Pre-1900 China):
Honorable Mention: Matthias L. Richter: The Embodied Text: Establishing Textual Identity in Early Chinese Manuscripts (Brill)
'I would hate [..] to give the impression that I think this book is anything other than a superb work of scholarship. [...] in its care for the presentation of the manuscript itself, Richter's study of Min zhi fumu will surely serve as a model for future studies of the many individual manuscripts of ancient China that have been unearthed in recent years.'
Edward L. Shaughnessy, Journal of Chinese Studies, 59 (2014)
目录
Part One
*MIN ZHI FUMU: Examing the manuscript and establishing the text
Part Two
The divergence of manuscript text and transmitted courterparts: a review of homogenizing readings
Part Three
Conparative interpretation of *MIN ZHI FUMU and its transmitted courterparts: differences in the nature of the texts and their ideology.