• Daoism and ecology: ways within a cosmic landscape vol. 6
    with Norman Girardot, Miller J., and Xiaogan
    Harvard Univ Ctr for the. 2001.
  •  99
    Financial Administration under the Tʿang DynastyFinancial Administration under the Tang Dynasty
    with D. C. Twitchett
    Journal of the American Oriental Society 93 (2): 215. 1973.
  •  62
    The Classical Chinese Primer: Its Three-Character Style and Authorship
    Journal of the American Oriental Society 105 (2): 191-196. 1985.
  •  61
    Index to Biographical Material in Chin and Yüan Literary WorksIndex to Biographical Material in Chin and Yuan Literary Works
    with Igor de Rachewiltz and Miyoko Nakano
    Journal of the American Oriental Society 93 (2): 214. 1973.
  •  135
    How did a neo-confucian school become the state orthodoxy?
    Philosophy East and West 23 (4): 483-505. 1973.
    It was the lack of hope for political reform that turned a neo-Confucianist school led by chu hsi to develop comprehensive metaphysical principles and integrated social actions as the only true way to put the confucian value system into practice. An ill-Advised persecution led to the contrary result: a heightened prestige. Facing the mongol threat, The state in an effort to strengthen itself belatedly adopted this school as the state orthodoxy, More for prestige than for reality. When the mongol…Read more
  •  91
    Globalization has changed almost every facet of life for people around the world, and today the flow of influence is no longer uni-directional. It is argued that East Asian societies are anchored in an indigenous form of hierarchical relationalism where social structure is produced by relational obligations of an ethical and normative nature that have slowed its traditional culture “melting into air” as prophesied by Marx. The successfully modernization of East Asia has involved hybridization, c…Read more
  •  21
    In attempting to define a "poetics of paradox" from a traditional Chinese standpoint, James Liu explores through a comparative approach linguistic, textual, and interpretive problems of relevance to Western literary criticism. Liu's study evolves from a paradoxical view--originating from early Confucian and Daoist philosophical texts--that the less is "said" in poetry, the more is "meant." Such a view implied the existence of paradox in the very use of language and led traditional Chinese hermen…Read more
  •  66
    Chinese Theories of Literature
    University of Chicago Press. 1975.