A Study Guide forHan and Qin Dynasties |
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Required
Readings: "The Ch'in and Han Dynasties," chapter 5 in The Arts of China by Michael Sullivan; "The Growth and Expansion of Early Chinese Culture through the Han Dynasty; Korea and Japan" in A History of Far Eastern Art by Sherman E. Lee. Recommended Reading: "Si-ma Qian" and "Lyrics of Chu" in An Anthology of Chinese Literature: Beginnings to 1911, edited and translated by Stephen Owen; The First Emperor of China by R.W. L. Guisso, Catherine Pagani with David Miller. Study Questions:
2. Read some of the poems written during the
Han Dynasty, such as the This page hosted by Geocities. Get your free homepage!
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See
on the Web: "The First Emperor" -- artifacts and excavation of the Qin Emperor's tomb, exhibition by the Birmingham Museum of Art; Terracotta Soldier from Qinshihuang's tomb; Han figurine of two dancers from collection at the Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell; Han Dynasty terracotta vessel, perhaps an incense burner, in shape of a mountain; Han bronze lamp; Rubbing of a Han Dynasty inscription; Han Dynasty figurines on auction; Tomb of Liu Wu, third Duke of Chu, in Shixi. Japanese Haniwa shamaness from collection at Brooklyn Museum of Art; Japanese Haniwa horse from the Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell; Japanese Haniwa warrior from the images collected by Jean Wetzel for a CalPoly class. Readings on the Web:
Si-ma Qian (about 145-85 B.C.E.) set the
standard for historical writing with his Records of the Grand Historian.
His writings about the Legalist Policies
of the Qin and two
biographies are available on the Internet through Professor Paul Halsall's site. Essay on Japanese Haniwa art and resources list compiled by Rebecca Arkenberg. |