MCLC: Ming-Qing Studies 2020--cfp

MCLC LIST denton.2 at osu.edu
Wed Jun 5 10:45:58 EDT 2019


MCLC LIST
Ming-Qing Studies 2020–cfp
Call for Papers
Ming Qing Studies 2020
edited by Paolo Santangelo (Sapienza University of Rome)
We are glad to inform you that the new edition of Ming Qing Studies 2019 will be published by WriteUp Site before the end of the year (see table of contents below).
Applicants are encouraged to submit abstracts for the next issues of Ming Qing Studies. The contributions should concern Ming-Qing China in one or few of its most significant and multifaceted aspects, as well as on East Asian countries covering the same time period. All articles will be examined by our qualified peer reviewers. We welcome creative and fresh approaches to the field of Asian studies. Particularly appreciated will be the contributions on anthropological and social history, collective imagery, and interdisciplinary approaches to the Asian cultural studies. All submitted papers must be original and in good British English style according to our guidelines and editorial rules. Please email an abstract (300-500 words, plus a basic bibliography) in MS Word or pdf attachments along with your biographical information to the addresses listed below. Please mention your full name with academic title, university affiliation, department or home institution, title of paper and contact details in your email.
Deadlines: 
Abstract and bibliographical notes: June 30th, 2019. 
Article: December 31st, 2019.
Ming Qing Studies is a yearly publication, both on line and in printed form, which continues the positive experience of Ming Qing Yanjiu (old series, 1992-2007) edited by Paolo Santangelo. Thanks to the cooperation of several scholars settled in Italy and abroad, it intends to widen the debate on the historical and cultural issues of late imperial China as well as pre-modern and modern East Asia. Although this publication focuses on late imperial China, its scope is broadened to the whole East Asia area, with its new cultural and anthropological features which are manifested in this fundamental period of transition from local to global history.
Please find the editorial norms and more information on Ming Qing Studies past issues at:
https://sites.google.com/site/mqsweb/home.
Contacts
Prof. Paolo Santangelo (paolo.santangelo at uniroma1.it)
Dr. M.Paola Culeddu (paola.culeddu at uniroma1.it)
Dr. Tommaso Previato (tommaso.previato at gmail.com)
Ming Qing Studies 2019
Table of Contents
Preface
Paolo Santangelo (Sapienza University of Rome)
A Response to an “Alien Invasion”: The Rise of Chinese Science Fiction.
Loïc Aloisio (Aix-Marseille University)
Jesuit Educational Tradition and the Remaking of Erudite Scholars in Late Qing China. A case study of Li Wenyu 李問漁 (1840 - 1911).
Bai Limin (Victoria University of Wellington)
Chinese Diplomatic Gifts in Russia in 1655-1730: an Aspect of Intercultural Exchange.
Rostislav Berezkin (Fudan University, Shanghai)
Fiction as Cautionary Tale: Rewriting “Rebellion” in Yu Wanchun’s Dangkou zhi.
Henry Lem (University of California, Irvine)
Expressing Desire Through Language: The Paradoxes of the “Baodai” Relationship.
Aude Lucas (Université Paris Diderot)
A Filial Publisher’s Unfilial Subjects: Printing, Literati Community, and Fiction-Making in Liushijia xiaoshuo.
Zhang Jing (New College of Florida)
Between Confucianism and Catholicism: Rethinking Wu Li as a Ming Loyalist.
Zhang Yu (Loyola University Maryland)
Visualising Human Differences in Late Imperial China: Body, Nakedness and Sexuality.
Zhu Jing (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin)
by denton.2 at osu.edu on June 5, 2019
You are subscribed to email updates from MCLC Resource Center
To stop receiving these emails, click here.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.osu.edu/pipermail/mclc/attachments/20190605/8709c7c7/attachment-0001.html>


More information about the MCLC mailing list