<p><b>Provides a new model for reading the </b><b><i>Shiji</i></b><b> and other early Chinese historical texts.</b></p><p><i>Narrative Devices in the</i> Shiji<i>: Retelling the Past</i> offers the first systematic analysis of narratives in early Chinese historical writings from 400 BCE to 100 CE with a focus on the <i>Shiji</i> (Records of the Historian) a vast collection of historical accounts completed by Sima Qian (145-86 BCE). For centuries the dominant approach to the <i>Shiji</i> has been to infer Sima's intentions from his biographical experiences and subsequently project them back into the text. This has caused the import of the work to be overshadowed by Sima's tragedy of castration and has minimized the question of how narrative as a form affects the text's interpretation. Lei Yang fills the gap by exploring how Sima manipulated the <i>Shiji</i>'s narrative structure to represent the past. Drawing on Gérard Genette's narratological theories the book examines how sequences of events build causality what is slowed down and sped up to manage information control and how the text provides multiple perspectives on the same events. Redefining the <i>Shiji</i>'s place as a turning point in Chinese textual history <i>Narrative Devices in the</i> Shiji sheds light on the evolution of early Chinese historiography. As an interdisciplinary dialogue between Chinese texts and the Western theories it opens the <i>Shiji</i> to new interpretations and provides a novel framework for Chinese historical writings.</p>
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