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  21. The Ming Dynasty</font><font size=+1><br><br>1368 - 1644 AD</font></font>
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  31. <A HREF='bibtxt2.html'>Bibliography Index</A></h5></center>
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  40. Antony, Robert J.&nbsp; <i>Like froth floating on the sea:</i>&nbsp; <i>the world of pirates and seafarers in late imperial south China.</i>&nbsp; China research monograph; 56. Berkeley: Institute of East Asian Studies, 2003.<br><br>
  41. Association for Asian Studies. Ming Biographical History Project Committee.&nbsp; <i>Dictionary of Ming biography, 1364-1644.</i>&nbsp; (eds. Goodrich, L. Carrington; Fang, Chaoying). New York: Columbia University Press, 1976.<br><br>
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  44. Becker, Jasper.&nbsp; <i>City of heavenly tranquility:</i>&nbsp; <i>Beijing in the history of China.</i>&nbsp; New York: Oxford University Press, 2008.<br><br>
  45. Berg, Daria.&nbsp; <i>The Quest for Gentility in China:</i>&nbsp; <i>Negotiations Beyond Gender and Class.</i>&nbsp; New York: Routledge, 2009.<br><br>
  46. Bernhardt, Kathryn.&nbsp; <i>Women and Property in China, 960-1949.</i>&nbsp; Law, Society, and Culture in China Series. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1999.<br><br>
  47. Birch, Cyril.&nbsp; <i>Scenes for Mandarins:</i>&nbsp; <i>The Elite Theater of the Ming.</i>&nbsp; Translations from the Asian Classics. New York: Columbia University Press, 1995.<br><br>
  48. Brankston, A. D.&nbsp; <i>Early Ming wares of Chingtechen.</i>&nbsp; Reprint. New York: Oxford University Press, Incorporated, 1983.<br><br>
  49. Bray, Francesca.&nbsp; <i>Technology and Society in Ming China (1368-1644).</i>&nbsp; Historical Perspectives on Technology, Society and Culture Series. Washington: American Historical Association, 2000.<br><br>
  50. Bretschneider, Emil.&nbsp; <i>Mediaeval Researches from Eastern Asiatic Sources:</i>&nbsp; <i>Geography and History of Central and Western Asia from the 13th to the 17th Century.</i>&nbsp; (Originally published 1888). New York: Hesperides Press, 2006.<br><br>
  51. Brokaw, Cynthia Joanne.&nbsp; <i>The Ledgers of Merit and Demerit:</i>&nbsp; <i>Social Change and Moral Order in Late Imperial China.</i>&nbsp; Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1991.<br><br>
  52. Brook, Timothy.&nbsp; <i>The troubled empire:</i>&nbsp; <i>China in the Yuan and Ming dynasties.</i>&nbsp; Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2010.<br><br>
  53. Brook, Timothy.&nbsp; <i>The Chinese state in Ming society.</i>&nbsp; London; New York: RoutledgeCurzon, 2005.<br><br>
  54. Brook, Timothy.&nbsp; <i>Geographical sources of Ming-Qing history.</i>&nbsp; 2nd edition. Michigan monographs in Chinese studies; v. 58 Ann Arbor: Center for Chinese Studies, University of Michigan, 2003.<br><br>
  55. Brook, Timothy.&nbsp; <i>The Confusions of Pleasure, Commerce and Culture in Ming China.</i>&nbsp; Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999.<br><br>
  56. Brook, Timothy.&nbsp; <i>Geographical sources of Ming-Qing history.</i>&nbsp; 2nd ed. Michigan Monographs in Chinese Studies, Vol. 58. Ann Arbor: Center for Chinese Studies, University of Michigan, 2002.<br><br>
  57. Brook, Timothy.&nbsp; <i>Geographical sources of Ming-Qing history.</i>&nbsp; Ann Arbor, MI: Center for Chinese Studies, 1988.<br><br>
  58. Brook, Timothy.&nbsp; <i>The Confusions of Pleasure:</i>&nbsp; <i>Commerce and Culture in Ming China.</i>&nbsp; Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998.<br><br>
  59. Brook, Timothy.&nbsp; <i>Praying for power:</i>&nbsp; <i>Buddhism and the formation of gentry society in late-Ming China.</i>&nbsp; Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1994.<br><br>
  60. Brose, Michael Carl.&nbsp; <i>Strategies of survival:</i>&nbsp; <i>Uyghur elites in Yuan and early-Ming China.</i>&nbsp; Thesis (Ph. D.) -- University of Pennsylvania, 2000. Ann Arbor: University Microfilms International, 2000.<br><br>
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  63. Cahill, James.&nbsp; <i>The painter's practice:</i>&nbsp; <i>how artists lived and worked in traditional China.</i>&nbsp; New York: Columbia University Press, 1995.<br><br>
  64. <i>The Cambridge History of China:</i>&nbsp; <i>The Ming Dynasty, 1368-1644.</i>&nbsp; (eds. Twitchett, Denis C.; Mote, Frederick W.). New York: Cambridge University Press, 1988.<br><br>
  65. <i>The Cambridge History of China:</i>&nbsp; <i>The Ming Dynasty, 1368-1644, Pt. 2.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Twitchett, Denis). New York: Cambridge University Press, 1998.<br><br>
  66. Cass, Victoria.&nbsp; <i>Dangerous Women, Warriors, Grannies and Geishas of the Ming.</i>&nbsp; Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 1999.<br><br>
  67. Chan, Albert S.&nbsp; <i>The glory and fall of the Ming dynasty.</i>&nbsp; Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 1982.<br><br>
  68. Chan, Hok-lam.&nbsp; <i>China and the Mongols:</i>&nbsp; <i>History and legend under the Yuan and Ming.</i>&nbsp; Variorum Collected Studies, No. CS647. Burlington: Ashgate Publishing Company; 1999.<br><br>
  69. Chang, Chun-Shu; Chang, Shelley H.&nbsp; <i>Crisis and Transformation in Seventeenth-Century China:</i>&nbsp; <i>Society, Culture, and Modernity in Li Yu's World.</i>&nbsp; Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1998.<br><br>
  70. Chang, Chun-shu; Chang, Shelley Hsueh-lun.&nbsp; <i>Crisis and transformation in seventeenth-century China:</i>&nbsp; <i>society, culture, and modernity in Li Yu's world.</i>&nbsp; Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 1992.<br><br>
  71. Chang, Joseph, Lawton, Thomas, and Allee, Stephen D.&nbsp; <i>Brushing the past:</i>&nbsp; <i>later Chinese calligraphy from the gift of Robert Hatfield Ellsworth.</i>&nbsp; Washington, DC: Freer Gallery of Art, Smithsonian Institution, 2000.<br><br>
  72. <i>Chinese Connoisseurship:</i>&nbsp; <i>The Ko Ku Yao Lun. The Essential Criteria of Antiquities.</i>&nbsp; (ed. trans. David, Sir Percival). London: Faber, 1971.<br><br>
  73. <i>Chinese government in Ming times:</i>&nbsp; <i>seven studies.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Hucker, Charles O.). Ann Arbor, MI: Books on Demand. <br><br>
  74. <i>Chinese Women in the Imperial Past:</i>&nbsp; <i>New Perspectives.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Zurndorfer, Harriet T.). Sinica Leidensia Series, 44. Boston: Brill Academic Publishers, 1999.<br><br>
  75. Chua, Amy.&nbsp; <i>Day of Empire:</i>&nbsp; <i>How Hyperpowers Rise to Global Dominance--and Why They Fall.</i>&nbsp; Harpswell, Maine: Anchor, 2009.<br><br>
  76. Cleare, John.&nbsp; <i>Distant Mountains.</i>&nbsp; New York: Crown Publishing Group, 1998.<br><br>
  77. Clunas, Craig.&nbsp; <i>Pictures and Visuality in Early Modern China.</i>&nbsp; Reaktion Books. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005.<br><br>
  78. Clunas, Craig.&nbsp; <i>Empire of great brightness:</i>&nbsp; <i>visual and material cultures of Ming China, 1368-1644.</i>&nbsp; Honolulu, HI: University of Hawaii Press, 2007.<br><br>
  79. Clunas, Craig.&nbsp; <i>Fruitful sites:</i>&nbsp; <i>garden culture in Ming dynasty China.</i>&nbsp; Envisioning Asia. London: Reaktion Books, 1996.<br><br>
  80. Clunas, Craig.&nbsp; <i>Empire of great brightness:</i>&nbsp; <i>visual and material cultures of Ming China.</i>&nbsp; Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2007.<br><br>
  81. Clunas, Craig.&nbsp; <i>Fruitful sites:</i>&nbsp; <i>garden culture in Ming dynasty China.</i>&nbsp; Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1996.<br><br>
  82. Clunas, Craig.&nbsp; <i>Superfluous things:</i>&nbsp; <i>Material culture and social status in early modern China.</i>&nbsp; Cambridge: Polity, 1991.<br><br>
  83. Cooper, Michael.&nbsp; <i>Rodriques the Interpreter:</i>&nbsp; <i>An Early Jesuit in Japan and China.</i>&nbsp; New York: Weatherhill, Incorporated, 1994.<br><br>
  84. Cummins, J. S.&nbsp; <i>A Question of Rites:</i>&nbsp; <i>Friar Domingo Navarrete and the Jesuits in China.</i>&nbsp; Brookfield, VT: Ashgate Publishing Company, 1992.<br><br>
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  87. Dardess, John W.&nbsp; <i>A Ming society:</i>&nbsp; <i>T'ai-ho County, Kiangsi, fourteenth to seventeenth centuries.</i>&nbsp; Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1997.<br><br>
  88. Dardess, John W.&nbsp; <i>Confucianism and autocracy:</i>&nbsp; <i>professional elites in the founding of the Ming dynasty.</i>&nbsp; Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1983.<br><br>
  89. Dardess, John W.&nbsp; <i>Blood and History in China:</i>&nbsp; <i>The Donglin Faction and Its Repression.</i>&nbsp; Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 2002.<br><br>
  90. Dardess, John W.&nbsp; <i>Blood and history in China:</i>&nbsp; <i>the Donglin faction and its repression, 1620-1627.</i>&nbsp; Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 2003.<br><br>
  91. De Bary, William T.&nbsp; <i>Waiting for the dawn:</i>&nbsp; <i>a plan for the prince - a study and translation of Huang Tsun-Hsi's Ming-I Tai-Fang Lu.</i>&nbsp; New York: Columbia University Press, 1993.<br><br>
  92. de Bary, Wm. Theodore; Lufrano, Richard J.&nbsp; <i>Sources of Chinese Tradition:</i>&nbsp; <i>From 1600 Through the Twentieth Century.</i>&nbsp; 2nd Edition. Introduction to Asian Civilizations Series, Vol. 2. New York: Columbia University Press, 2001.<br><br>
  93. De Pee, Christian.&nbsp; <i>The writing of weddings in middle-period China:</i>&nbsp; <i>Text and ritual practice in the eighth through fourteenth centuries.</i>&nbsp; Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 2007.<br><br>
  94. Debary, William T.&nbsp; <i>Self and society in Ming thought.</i>&nbsp; Reprint. Ann Arbor, MI: Books on Demand. <br><br>
  95. Des Forges, Roger V.&nbsp; <i>Cultural centrality and political change in Chinese history:</i>&nbsp; <i>northeast Henan in the fall of the Ming.</i>&nbsp; Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2003.<br><br>
  96. Des Forges, Roger.&nbsp; <i>Cultural Centrality and Political Change in Chinese History:</i>&nbsp; <i>Northeast Henan in the Fall of the Ming.</i>&nbsp; Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2003.<br><br>
  97. <i>Development and Decline of Fukien Province in the 17th and 18th Centuries.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Vermeer, E. B.). Sinica Leidensia Series, 22. Leiden: Brill Academic Publishers, 1990.<br><br>
  98. Di Cosmo, Nicola; Bao, Dalizhabu.&nbsp; <i>Manchu-Mongol relations on the eve of the Qing conquest:</i>&nbsp; <i>A documentary history, 1636-1644.</i>&nbsp; Inner Asian Library, Vol. 1. Boston: Brill Academic Publishers, Incorporated, 2001.<br><br>
  99. Ditmanson, Peter Brian.&nbsp; <i>Contesting authority:</i>&nbsp; <i>Intellectual lineages and the Chinese imperial court from the twelfth to the fifteenth centuries.</i>&nbsp; Thesis (Ph. D.) -- Harvard University, 1999. Ann Arbor: University Microfilms International, 2000.<br><br>
  100. Dixin, Xu; Wu Chengming.&nbsp; <i>Chinese Capitalism, 1522-1840.</i>&nbsp; Studies on the Chinese Economy. New York: Saint Martin's Press, 1999.<br><br>
  101. Dreyer, Edward L.&nbsp; <i>Early Ming China:</i>&nbsp; <i>A Political History, 1355-1435.</i>&nbsp; Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1982.<br><br>
  102. Dreyer, Edward L.&nbsp; <i>Zheng He:</i>&nbsp; <i>China and the oceans in the early Ming dynasty, 1405-1433</i>&nbsp; New York: Pearson Longman, 2007.<br><br>
  103. <i>Dynastic Crisis and Cultural Innovation:</i>&nbsp; <i>From the Late Ming to the Late Qing and Beyond.</i>&nbsp; (eds. Wang, David Der-wei; Wei, Shang). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2005.<br><br>
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  106. <i>Early Ming Porcelain.</i>&nbsp; Torrance, CA: Heian International Publishing, Incorporated, 1982.<br><br>
  107. <i>East meets West:</i>&nbsp; <i>the Jesuits in China, 1582-1773.</i>&nbsp; (eds. Ronan, Charles E.; Oh, Bonnie B.). Chicago: Loyola University Press, 1988.<br><br>
  108. Eastman, Lloyd E.&nbsp; <i>Family, fields, and ancestors:</i>&nbsp; <i>constancy and change in China's social and economic history, 1550-1949.</i>&nbsp; New York: Oxford University Press, 1988.<br><br>
  109. Engelfriet, Peter M.&nbsp; <i>Euclid in China:</i>&nbsp; <i>The Genesis of the First Chinese Translation of Euclid's Elements, Books I-VI (Jihe Yuanben, Beijing, 1607) & Its Reception up to 1723.</i>&nbsp; Boston: Brill Academic Publishers, 1998.<br><br>
  110. <i>Essentials of Neo-Confucianism:</i>&nbsp; <i>Eight Major Philosophers of the Song Ming Periods.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Huang, Siu-chi). Westport: Greenwood Publishing Group, 1999.<br><br>
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  113. Farmer, Edward L.&nbsp; <i>Early Ming government:</i>&nbsp; <i>the evolution of dual capitals.</i>&nbsp; Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1976.<br><br>
  114. Farmer, Edward L.&nbsp; <i>Zhu Yuanzhang and Early Ming Legislation:</i>&nbsp; <i>The Reordering of Chinese Society Following the Era of Mongol Rule.</i>&nbsp; Sinica Leidensia Series, 34. Leiden: Brill Academic Publishers, 1995.<br><br>
  115. Farmer, Edward L.; Taylor, Romeyn; Waltner, Ann.&nbsp; <i>Ming history:</i>&nbsp; <i>an introductory guide to research.</i>&nbsp; Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota, History Department, Ming Studies Research Series, 1994.<br><br>
  116. Faure, David.&nbsp; <i>Emperor and ancestor:</i>&nbsp; <i>state and lineage in South China.</i>&nbsp; Stanford, CA.: Stanford University Press, 2007.<br><br>
  117. Fei, Si-yen.&nbsp; <i>Negotiating Urban Space:</i>&nbsp; <i>Urbanization and Late Ming Nanjing.</i>&nbsp; Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Asia Center, 2009.<br><br>
  118. Feng, Meng-lung; Yang, Shuhui; Yang, Yunqin.&nbsp; <i>Stories Old and New:</i>&nbsp; <i>A Ming Dynasty Collection.</i>&nbsp; Ming Dynasty Collection. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2000.<br><br>
  119. Finnane, Antonia.&nbsp; <i>Speaking of Yangzhou:</i>&nbsp; <i>a Chinese city, 1550-1850.</i>&nbsp; Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2004.<br><br>
  120. Fisher, Carney T. (Carney Thomas).&nbsp; <i>The chosen one:</i>&nbsp; <i>Succession and adoption in the court of Ming Shizong.</i>&nbsp; FEH/ASAA East Asia Series. Sydney; Boston: Allen & Unwin, 1990.<br><br>
  121. Foccardi, Gabriele.&nbsp; <i>The Chinese travelers of the Ming period.</i>&nbsp; Wiesbaden: O. Harrassowitz, 1986.<br><br>
  122. Franke, Wolfgang.&nbsp; <i>Sino-Malaysiana:</i>&nbsp; <i>selected papers on Ming and Qing history and on the overseas Chinese in Southeast Asia, 1942-1988.</i>&nbsp; Singapore: South Seas Society, 1989.<br><br>
  123. Franke, Wolfgang.&nbsp; <i>Preliminary notes on the important Chinese literary sources for the history of the Ming dynasty.</i>&nbsp; Philadelphia, PA: Porcupine Press, Incorporated, 1985.<br><br>
  124. <i>From Ming to Ch'ing:</i>&nbsp; <i>Conquest, region and continuity in seventeenth-century China.</i>&nbsp; (eds. Spence, Jonathan D.; Wills, John E., Jr.). Ann Arbor, MI: Books on Demand. <br><br>
  125. <i>From Ming to Ch'ing:</i>&nbsp; <i>conquest, region, and continuity in seventeenth-century China.</i>&nbsp; (eds. Spence, Jonathan D.; Wills, John E., Jr.). New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1979.<br><br>
  126. Fu, Li-tsui Flora.&nbsp; <i>Framing Famous Mountains:</i>&nbsp; <i>Grand Tour and Mingshan Paintings in Sixteenth-Century China.</i>&nbsp; Hong Kong: The Chinese University Press, 2009.<br><br>
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  129. Geiss, James.&nbsp; <i>Peking under the Ming (1368-1644).</i>&nbsp; Thesis (Ph. D.) -- Princeton University. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University, 1979.<br><br>
  130. Gerritsen, Anne.&nbsp; <i>Ji'an Literati and the local in Song-Yuan-Ming China.</i>&nbsp; Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill, 2007.<br><br>
  131. Gulik, Robert Hans van.&nbsp; <i>Sexual life in ancient China:</i>&nbsp; <i>a preliminary survey of Chinese sex and society from ca. 1500 B.C. till 1644 A.D.</i>&nbsp; Sinica Leidensia, Vol. 57. Originally published 1961. Leiden, Boston: Brill, 2003.<br><br>
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  134. Hammond, Kenneth J.&nbsp; <i>Pepper Mountain:</i>&nbsp; <i>The Life, Death and Posthumous Career of Yang Jisheng.</i>&nbsp; New York, NY: Routledge, 2007.<br><br>
  135. Handlin, Joanna F.&nbsp; <i>Action in late Ming thought:</i>&nbsp; <i>the reorientation of Lu K'un and other scholar officials.</i>&nbsp; Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1983.<br><br>
  136. Hattaway, Paul.&nbsp; <i>China's Christian martyrs:</i>&nbsp; <i>1300 years of Christians in China who have died for their faith.</i>&nbsp; Oxford: Monarch, 2007.<br><br>
  137. Hobson, R. L.&nbsp; <i>The Wares of the Ming Dynasty.</i>&nbsp; Reprint. Mineola, NY: Dover Publications, Incorporated, 1978.<br><br>
  138. Holdsworth, May.&nbsp; <i>Adorning the empress.</i>&nbsp; Hong Kong: FormAsia, 2002.<br><br>
  139. Hong Kong Art Museum.&nbsp; <i>Paintings and calligraphy of the Ming and Qing dynasties from Chih Lo Lou collection.</i>&nbsp; Hong Kong: Chinese University Press, 1992.<br><br>
  140. Hong Kong Art Museum.&nbsp; <i>Paintings of the Ming and Qing Dynasties from the Guangzhou Art Gallery.</i>&nbsp; Hong Kong: Chinese University Press, 1986.<br><br>
  141. Hong Kong Art Museum.&nbsp; <i>Archaeological finds from the Five Dynasties to the Qing periods in Guangdong.</i>&nbsp; Hong Kong: Chinese University Press, 1989.<br><br>
  142. Hong, Zicheng.&nbsp; <i>Vegetable roots discourse:</i>&nbsp; <i>wisdom from Ming China on life and living.</i>&nbsp; (trans, Aitken, Robert, & Kwok, D. W. Y.) Washington: Counterpoint, <br><br>
  143. Horner, Charles.&nbsp; <i>Rising China and its postmodern fate:</i>&nbsp; <i>memories of empire in a new global context.</i>&nbsp; Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press, 2009.<br><br>
  144. Hoshi Ayao.&nbsp; <i>The Ming tribute grain system.</i>&nbsp; (trans. Elvin, Mark). Ann Arbor, MI: Center for Chinese Studies, 1970.<br><br>
  145. Hsu, Pi-Ching.&nbsp; <i>Beyond eroticism:</i>&nbsp; <i>a historian's reading of humor in Feng Menglong's Child's Folly.</i>&nbsp; Lanham, Md.: University Press of America, 2006.<br><br>
  146. Hsu, Sung-Peng.&nbsp; <i>A Buddhist leader in Ming China:</i>&nbsp; <i>the life and thought of Han-shan Te-ch'ing, 1546-1623.</i>&nbsp; University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1979.<br><br>
  147. Huang, Philip C.&nbsp; <i>The Peasant Family and Rural Development in the Yangzi Delta, 1350-1988.</i>&nbsp; Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1990.<br><br>
  148. Huang, Ray.&nbsp; <i>Taxation and Governmental Finance in Sixteenth-Century Ming China.</i>&nbsp; Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press, 2009.<br><br>
  149. Huang, Ray.&nbsp; <i>1587, A Year of No Significance.</i>&nbsp; New Haven: Yale University Press, 1981.<br><br>
  150. Hucker, Charles O.&nbsp; <i>The Ming dynasty:</i>&nbsp; <i>its origins and evolving institutions.</i>&nbsp; Ann Arbor, MI: Center for Chinese Studies, 1978.<br><br>
  151. Hucker, Charles O.&nbsp; <i>The traditional Chinese state in Ming Times (1368-1644).</i>&nbsp; Ann Arbor, MI: Books on Demand, 1961.<br><br>
  152. Hucker, Charles O.&nbsp; <i>The traditional Chinese state in Ming Times 1368-1644.</i>&nbsp; Tucson, AZ: University of Arizona Press, 1961.<br><br>
  153. Hucker, Charles O.&nbsp; <i>Two studies on Ming history.</i>&nbsp; Ann Arbor, MI: Center for Chinese Studies, 1971.<br><br>
  154. Hucker, Charles O.&nbsp; <i>The censorial system of Ming China.</i>&nbsp; Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1966.<br><br>
  155. Hung, Eva.&nbsp; <i>Paradoxes of Traditional Chinese Literature:</i>&nbsp; <i>An Analysis of Literary Works from the Tang Dynasty to the Late Qing.</i>&nbsp; Hong Kong: Chinese University Press, 1997.<br><br>
  156. <a name=J></a>
  157. </font><strong><font size =+3>J </font></strong><FONT SIZE=-1>&nbsp; <a class=alp href=#Top> Return to the top</a><br><br>
  158. <i>Jesuits at the Court of Peking.</i>&nbsp; Westport, CT: Greenwood Publishing Group, Incorporated, 1975.<br><br>
  159. Jiang, Yonglin.&nbsp; <i>The Great Ming Code: Da Ming lu.</i>&nbsp; (trans. Jiang, Yonglin). Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2005.<br><br>
  160. Johnston, Alastair I.&nbsp; <i>Cultural realism:</i>&nbsp; <i>strategic culture and grand strategy in Ming China.</i>&nbsp; Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1995.<br><br>
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  288. </font>
  289. </blockquote>
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