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Writing and law in late Imperial China : crime, conflict, and judgment /

Scholars of Chinese history, law, literature, and religions consider the influence of the Ming and Qing dynasties legal culture on literature and the influence of literary conventions on the presentation of legal case.

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Otros Autores: Hegel, Robert E., 1943-, Carlitz, Katherine
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Seattle : University of Washington Press, ©2007.
Colección:Asian law series ; no. 18.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Making a case : characterizing the filial son / Maram Epstein
  • Explaining the shrew : narratives of spousal violence and the critique of masculinity in eighteenth-century criminal cases / Janet Theiss
  • Between oral and written cultures : Buddhist monks in Qing legal plaints / Yasuhiko Karasawa
  • Art of persuasion in literature and law / Robert E. Hegel
  • Filial felons : leniency and legal reasoning in Qing China / Thomas Buoye
  • Discourse on insolvency and negligence in eighteenth-century China / Pengsheng Chiu
  • Poverty tales and statutory politics in mid-Qing fraud cases / Mark McNicholas
  • Indictment rituals and the judicial continuum in late Imperial China / Paul R. Katz
  • Reading court cases from the Song and the Ming : fact and fiction, law and literature / James St. André
  • Beyond Bao : moral ambiguity and the law in late Imperial Chinese narrative literature / Daniel M. Youd
  • Genre and justice in late Qing China : Wu Woyao's Strange Case of Nine Murders and its antecedents / Katherine Carlitz
  • Interpretive communities : legal meaning in Qing law / Jonathan Ocko.