The Ancestral Landscape
- China Research Monograph
About the Author
Table of Contents
Preface
Citation and Transcription Conventions
1. Climate
2. Agriculture
Agricultural Schedule
Pests and Diseases
3. Time: Days Nights and Suns
Day and Night
Sun Cult
The Shang Day
4. Time: Calendrical Structures
The Sixty-Day Cycle
The Xun 旬 Week
The Lunation
The Five-Ritual Cycle
The Numbered Si 祀 Ritual Cycle
5. Space: Center and Periphery
The Capital or Cult Center
Tu 土: The Four Lands
Fang 方 Areas and Powers
Wu Powers
Goings Out and Comings In
6. Space: Cosmos and Orientation
Orientation
Cardinal Directions: The Land
Cardinal Directions: The Weather
Divination Bones as World Maps
7. Community: The Land and Its Inhabitants
The Royal Community
Other Communities
Men Animals and Landscape
Powers on the Land
8. Cosmologies and Legacies: The "Winds" of Shang
Figures
Tables
Key to the Inscriptions Translated by Reference Number
Index to the Inscriptions Translated
Bibliography A: Abbreviations for the Oracle-Bone Collections and Reference Works Cited
Bibliography B: Other Works Cited
Index
Reviews
"Those who have a professional interest in Early China studies will find this book not only informative in its own right but also a good portal through which to enter more deeply into the material....But this is also a fine (and all too unusual) example of a scholarly book that is worth reading for pure pleasure quite apart from its value as a source of particular information and analysis. Keightley's lucid prose and magisterial interpretive stance together with the richness of the subject itself make this book a rare treat. Even the footnotes are interesting. The Ancestral Landscape deserves to find a readership far beyond the confines of its scholarly field."—John S. Major China Review International 9 no. 2 (Fall 2002): 460-464
“David Keightley is one of a handful of American scholars who have worked methodically to introduce the complexities of [oracle bone] scholarship to Western readers. Unlike many other scholars his approach is to let the bones speak for themselves and he only rarely introduces evidence from the later transmitted textual tradition. […] The Ancestral Landscape is an excellent tool for students to learn how historians can decipher the often-cryptic bone inscriptions for vital social historical and cultural information. —Constance A. Cook Lehigh University Journal of Chinese Religions 29 no. 1 (2001): 311–313
