Showing posts with label china. Show all posts
Showing posts with label china. Show all posts

Wednesday, 8 February 2012

North China Herald: new online resource

Now available! Brill have made all issues of The North-China herald and Supreme Court and consular gazette (to give it its full title!) from 1850 to 1940 available in a digitized format.

The newspaper was published in Shanghai, which was "at the heart of China’s dealing with the Euro-American world and a city at the forefront of developments in Chinese politics, culture, education and the economy. As the official journal for British consular notifications, and announcements of the Shanghai Municipal Council, it is the first – and sometimes only – point of reference for information and comment on a range of foreign and Chinese activities." Brill website

It "is universally acclaimed as the prime printed source in any language for the history of the foreign presence in China from around 1850 to the 1940s" Brill website


 LINK TO LIBRARY CATALOGUE PAGE

INTRODUCTORY VIDEO FROM BRILL (YouTube)

Wednesday, 27 April 2011

Museums and ethics

The Smithsonian Institution in Washington is facing calls to cancel a planned exhibition of Chinese artifacts salvaged from a Tang-era shipwreck as they were recovered by a commercial treasure-hunter rather than by academic, archaeological methods.
Read more in this article from the online New York Times  

Thursday, 21 October 2010

Poetry in Ancient China and Archaic Greece

Alexander Beecroft's "Authorship and cultural identity in early Greece and China: patterns of literary circulation" reviewed by Hyun Jin Kim of Sydney University in Bryn Mawr Classical Review 

Published this year by Cambridge University Press, this is a "sophisticated comparative study of Archaic Greek and early Chinese poetry"

Read the book in SOAS Library - shelved at CC808.0209 / 734034 (Level C, stacks 152-155)