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This volume supplements Tang Tales, A Guided Reader (Volume 1;
2010) and presents twelve more Tang tales, going beyond the
standard corpus of these narratives to include six stories
translated into English for the first time. The rich annotation and
translator's notes for these twelve tales provide insights into
many aspects of Tang material culture and medieval thought,
including Buddhism and Daoism.In addition to meticulously annotated
translations, the book offers original texts (with some textual
notes), and commentaries in the form of translator's notes, thereby
joining the first volume of Tang tales as the only collections that
introduce students to Tang tales while also challenging specialists
interested in the field.
The book begins with a history of previous translations of Tang
tales, surveying how Chinese scholarship has shaped the reception
and rendition of these texts in the West. In that context, Tang
Dynasty Tales offers the first annotated translations of six major
tales (often called chuanqi, "transmitting the strange") which are
interpreted specifically for students and scholars interested in
medieval Chinese literature. Following the model of intertextual
readings that Glen Dudbridge introduced in his The Tale of Li Wa
(Oxford, 1983), the annotation points to resonances with classical
texts, while setting the tales in the political world of their
time; the "Translator's Notes" that follow each translation explain
how these resonances and topical contexts expand the meaning of the
text. Each translation is also supported by a short glossary of
original terms from the tale and a bibliography guiding the reader
to further studies. The meticulous scholarship of this book
elevates it above all existing collections of these stories, and
the inclusion of a history of the translation work in the west,
intended for graduate students, researchers, and other translators,
broadens the collections' appeal.
With Part I of the two-part fifth volume of Ssu-ma Ch ien s Shi
chi (The Grand Scribe s Records), we enter the world of the shih
chia or "hereditary houses." These ten chapters trace the history
of China s first states, from their establishment in the 11th
century B.C. until their incorporation in the first empire under
the Ch in in 221 B.C. Combining myth, anecdote, chronicle, and
biography based on early written and oral sources, many no longer
extant, the narratives make for compelling reading, as dramatic and
readable as any in this grand history."
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