ABOUT THIS BOOKBetween the sixth and twentieth centuries, the civil service examinations created and maintained political coherence across the Chinese polity. Preparation for the examinations transformed the lives of literate elites by defining educational standards and disseminating a language that determined elite status. However, as participation in the examinations became central to that status, an intense competition to determine the educational curriculum and the subject matter of the examinations erupted between intellectual and political rivals. The principal goal of this book is to explain the restructuring of the examination field during a critical point in its history, the Southern Song dynasty (1127-1279), which witnessed the increasing domination of the examinations by the Neo-Confucian Learning of the Way movement.
By analyzing textbooks, examination questions and essays, and official and private commentary, Hilde De Weerdt examines how occupational, political, and intellectual groups shaped curricular standards and examination criteria and how examination standards in turn shaped political and intellectual agendas. These questions reframe the debate about the civil service examinations and their place in the imperial order.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Tables and Figures 000
Chronology 000
Abbreviations 000
Introduction 1
The Civil Service Examinations:
Continuity and Change?2
From Northern Song to Southern Song?6
The Examination Field?11
Part I: Prolegomena
1 Intellectual Traditions and Teachers 25
The Learning of the Way?25
From Yongjia to "Yongjia" ?46
Scholarship and Movement?53
2 Examination Expositions and Policy
Response Essays
in Literati Culture 55
Exegesis and Examination Writing?59
Government and Examination Writing?78
Part II: The "Yongjia" Teachers
in the Examination Field
3 The "Yongjia" Teachers' Standards for
Examination Success
(ca. 1150-ca. 1200) 89
Standards for Policy Response Essays?90
Standards for Expositions?111
4 Preparing for the Examinations (ca.
1150-ca. 1200):
The "Yongjia" Curriculum 109
History and Administrative
Reasoning?130
Reading and Writing?151
Part III: The Court in the
Examination Field
5 Court Politics and Examination Standards
(1127-1274) 173
The Policy of "Great Impartiality"?174
Prohibitive Interventions in the
Twelfth Century ?213
The Ban on "False Learning" and the
Politics of Anthologizing?202
Changing Standards in the Thirteenth
Century?213
Part IV: The Learning of the Way Movement
in the Examination Field
6 Preparing for the Examinations (ca.
1150-1274):
Developing the Learning of the Way
Curriculum 229
Zhu Xi's Critique of Examination Prep
aration and the
"Yongjia" Curriculum?231
Moral Philosophy: Chen Chun's Examina
tion Guide for
Learning of the Way Believers?251
History and Government: Ideological R
econciliation in
Commercial Encyclopedias?270
Reading and Writing: The Syncretizati
on of Canons?297
7 The Learning of the Way Transformation
of Examination
Standards (ca. 1200-1274) 322
Standards for Expositions?323
Standards for Policy Response
Essays?345
The Learning of the Way as Official
Ideology?365
Conclusion 375
From Northern Song to Southern Song,
Revisited?375
Intellectual History and the
Examination Field?381
Appendixes
A Notes on Primary Sources 391
B Tables 408
Reference Matter
Works Consulted 431
Index 479