Authority in the Zuozhuan

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Date

1996-08

Authors

Duncan, William E.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

University of Oregon

Abstract

The Zuozhuan 评论 (Zuo Commentaries); a narrative history of China's Spring and Autumn period (722-479 BCE), has been included among the thirteen classics of Confucianism since the Tang dynasty. Yet its pages contain numerous references to Shang and early Zhou divination practices. It seems paradoxical that a text identified with Confucian humanism would be full of references to the supernatural. I suggest that the Zuozhuan builds upon the foundations of the authority of Shang and Zhou ritual to establish the authority of Confucian doctrine. This phenomenon has been mentioned by other scholars, though no study has addressed this directly. It is the goal of this thesis to use passages in the Zuozhuan to demonstrate how authority moved from an external source to an internal source during the Eastern Zhou and to show that Zuozhuan makes use of something that Lakoff and Johnson have called idealized cognitive models.

Description

111 pages

Keywords

Zuo Commentaries, Zuozhuan, Confucian doctrine, Confucian humanism, Spring and Autumn Annals of Mister Zuo, Spring and Autumn Period

Citation