English-language Publications of
James T.C. Liu 劉子健 (1919-1993)
Liu, James T. C. 1957. “An Early Sung Reformer: Fan
Chung-yen.” Chinese
Thought and Institutions. ed. John K. Fairbank. Chicago: University of
Chicago Press.
1959. “Eleven-Century Chinese Bureaucrats: Some
Historical Classifications and Behavioral Types.” Administrative Science
Quarterly 4, no. 2: 207-26.
1959. Reform
in Sung China: Wang An-shih
(1021-1086) and His New Policies. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University
Press.
1962. “An Administrative Cycle in Chinese History:
The Case of Northern Sung Emperors.” Journal of Asian Studies 21, no. 2:
137-52.
1964. “The Neo-Traditional Period (ca. A.D.
800-1900) in Chinese History.” Journal of Asian Studies 24, no. 1:
105-7.
1964. “Two Forms of Worshipping the Heaven in Sung
China.” Bulletin of the
Institute of Ethnology., 45-81. Taipei: Academia Sinica.
1967. Ou-yang
Hsiu: an Eleventh-Century Neo-Confucianist. Stanford: Stanford University
Press.
1967. “The Sung Views on the Control of Government
Clerks.” Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 10,
no. 2.3: 317-44.
1970. “The Southern Sung Emperors and Opinion
Officials.” Tsing-Hua Journal of Chinese Studies 8: 340-49.
1972. “Yüeh Fei (1107-1141) and China's Image of
Loyalty.” Journal of Asian Studies 30, no. 2: 291-97.
1973. “How Did a Neo-Confucian School Become the
State Orthodoxy?” Philosophy East and West 23, no. 4: 483-505.
1973. “The Road to Neo-Confucian Orthodoxy: An
Interpretation.” Philosohpy East and West 23, no. 4: 483-505.
1973. “The Sung Emperors and the Ming-t'ang or Hall
of Enlightenment.” Études Song
In Memoriam Étienne Balazs, Serie II. ed. Fran oise Aubin. Paris: Mouton
& Co.
1978. “Liu Tsai (1165-1238): His Philanthropy and
Neo-Confucian Limitations.” Oriens Extremus 25, no. 1: 1-29.
1979. “Accomodation politics: southern Sung
China and 1930's China
In Studia Sino-Mongolica:
Festschr. fur Herbert Franke, ed. Wolfgang Bauer. Wiesbaden: Steiner, pp. 69-82.
1985. “Polo and Cultural Change: From T'ang to Sung
China.” Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 45, no. 1: 203-24.
1985. “The classical Chinese primer: its
three-character style and authorship.”
Journal of the American Oriental Society 105.2:191-196.
1986. “The Image of Scholar-Generals and a Case in
the Southern Sung. Saeculum 37, no. 2: 182-92.
1988. China Turning Inward:
Intellectual-Political Changes in the Early Twelfth Century. Cambridge,
Mass.: Harvard University Press.
1989. “A Note on Classifying Sung Confucians.” Bulletin
of Sung Yüan Studies 21: 1-7.
1993. “Wei Liao-weng's Thwarted Statecraft.”
In Ordering the World: Approaches to State and Society in Sung Dynasty
China, ed. Robert P
Hymes and Conrad Schirokauer. Berkeley: University of California Press, pp.
336-348
Liu, James T. C., and Peter Golas, ed. 1969. Change in Sung China; Innovation or
Renovation? Lexington, Mass: Heath.
Liu, James T.C. and Wei-ming Tu, eds. 1971. Traditional
China. Englewood Cliffs, Prentice-Hall.