Skip to product information
1 of 1

Hanvueng: The Goose King and the Ancestral King

Publisher:

Regular price $297.00
Regular price $297.00 Sale price $297.00
Sold out
This work is an annotated edition of a ritual manuscript, written in the traditional Zhuang character script. The Hanvueng epic is a narrative in verse about murderous enmity between two royal step...
Read More
  • 09 April 2015
View Product Details
This work is an annotated edition of a ritual manuscript, written in the traditional Zhuang character script. The Hanvueng epic is a narrative in verse about murderous enmity between two royal step-brothers, recited when there is fraternal feuding, death by violence, outbreaks of smallpox, or other such disasters. The theme of enmity is an important one that resonates deeply in the Tai societies on the periphery of the Chinese empire. The narrative touches on many other aspects of life in the valley-kingdoms in the highlands of Guangxi: marriage and inheritance, match-making, slavery and social stratification, agriculture, hunting, fishing, raiding, livestock raising dye-making, wild animals and plants, and the use of ritual to put things to rights.



files/i.png Icon
Price: $297.00
Pages: 642
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Zhuang Traditional Texts
Publication Date: 09 April 2015
ISBN: 9789004285613
Format: Hardcover
REVIEWS Icon
Hanvueng: The Goose King and the Ancestral King, An Epic from Guangxi in Southern China (Brill, 2015) by David Holm has been shortlisted for the the 2018 Medal for Excellence in Translation, a major national award that recognises outstanding achievement in translation and the vital role of translators in Australian culture and scholarly discourse.(https://www.humanities.org.au/2018/09/12/shortlist-announced-for-medal-for-excellence-in-translation/)
David Holm, D.Phil. (1980) in Chinese, University of Oxford, is Professor in the Department of Ethnology at National Chengchi University. He has published extensively on the traditional language and culture of the Zhuang, a Tai-speaking people indigenous to Southern China.

Meng Yuanyao, PhD (2002) University of Melbourne, is Professor in the Department of Minority Languages in the Guangxi University for Nationalities. He has published The Names and Classification of Common Plants in Zhuang (in English, 2006) and numerous books on Zhuang song texts and traditional culture.