Recently, Liu Haiwei, Assistant Professor in the Institute of Humanities at ShanghaiTech University, has published his research article in the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, one of the most prestigious Asian cultural studies journals in the world. The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society is the official journal for The Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, which, founded in 1824, is the oldest association for Asian cultural studies in the world. This journal, quarterly published by the Cambridge University Press, contains the most pioneering research articles relating to the history, literature, arts, and philology of Asia.
Information of Professor Liu’s article is as follows:
Title: Apocalyptic Belief and Prophecy: Constructing Political Legitimacy during the Yuan-Ming Transition
Abstract: According to recent research, after the Song dynasty, there was a transformation of the political culture in imperial China according to which Confucian elites and dynastic rulers ceased to construct political legitimacy by interpreting prophecies. By examining the process of how Zhu Yuanzhang, the founder of the Ming dynasty, utilized a popular prophecy and how he concealed his utilization of this prophecy after enthronement, this article offers a more nuanced narrative of the transformation. It shows that during the Yuan-Ming transition, rulers sought to employ prophecies to construct their image as sovereigns favoured by Heaven, but, ironically, in official writings rulers tended to hide their utilization of prophecies so as to highlight their virtues which deserved the Mandate of Heaven. This article argues that after the Song, the role of prophecies changed in the political arena—not from important to unimportant, but from officially recognized to officially concealed.
Article Link: https://doi.org/10.1017/S135618632200027X
Professor Liu is the only author of this article, and ShanghaiTech is the only academic affiliation of the author.