Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies
December 2018
Research Articles:
- STEPHEN MCDOWALL on cultural trauma of Ming remnant subjects
- BRIAN STEININGER on medieval Sino-Japanese education
- KEVIN BUCKELEW on supernatural embodiment in Buddhism & Daoism
- ARMIN SELBITSCHKA on scribes’ skills and identity in early China
Review Essays:
- PAMELA KYLE CROSSLEY on The Cambridge History of China series
- EVELYN S. RAWSKI & SUSAN NAQUIN on eighteenth-century Canton trade
- JAMES A MILLWARD on Xinjiang & Uyghur historiography
- MATTHEW W. MOSCA on seventeenth-century maritime China
12 Book Reviews
To view the full table of contents, visit the HJAS website.
About HJAS: Founded in 1936 under the auspices of the Harvard-Yenching Institute, the Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies (HJAS) has without interruption pursued its mission to disseminate original, outstanding research and book reviews on the humanities in Asia, focusing at present on the areas of China, Japan, Korea, and Inner Asia.
For a complete run of back issues online, with a five-year moving wall, see JSTOR. Starting with Volume 69 (2009), issues are also available through Project MUSE. For more information, please visit the HJAS official website.