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The Scholar and the State: Fiction as Political Discourse in Late Imperial China: A Note on Chinese Romanization

The Scholar and the State: Fiction as Political Discourse in Late Imperial China
A Note on Chinese Romanization
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table of contents
  1. Cover Page
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Dedication
  5. Contents
  6. Acknowledgments
  7. A Note on Chinese Romanization
  8. Introduction
  9. 1. A Rugged Partnership: The Intellectual Elite and the Imperial State
  10. 2. Romance of the Three Kingdoms: The Mencian View of Political Sovereignty
  11. 3. The Scholar-Lover in Erotic Fiction: A Power Game of Selection
  12. 4. The Scholars: Trudging Out of a Textual Swamp
  13. 5. The Stone in Dream of the Red Chamber: Unfit to Repair the Azure Sky
  14. Coda: Out of the Imperial Shadow
  15. Notes
  16. Glossary of Chinese Characters
  17. Selected Bibliography
  18. Index

A Note on Chinese Romanization

In this book the pinyin system is used for Chinese romanization. For citations from sources where the Wade-Giles system is used, all Chinese names and terms in the text have been converted to pinyin for the sake of consistency. The Wade-Giles romanization for titles of books and articles, however, remains unchanged. I thank the original authors for their understanding.

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