Charles de Harlez The Yih King 16p
Charles de Harlez The Yih King 16p
Charles de Harlez The Yih King 16p
The
Chinese Politics
Classical Commentary
and Literati Activism
in the Northern Song
Period, 960–1127
Tze-ki Hon
The Yijing and Chinese Politics
SUNY series in Chinese Philosophy and Culture
Roger T. Ames, editor
The Yijing and Chinese Politics
Classical Commentary and Literati Activism
in the Northern Song Period, 960–27
Tze-ki Hon
No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without
written permission. No part of this book may be stored in a retrieval system or trans-
mitted in any form or by any means including electronic, electrostatic, magnetic tape,
mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior permission in
writing of the publisher.
Acknowledgments ix
Chronology of Northern Song Emperors xiii
Introduction
Conclusion 4
Like a traveler who returns home after a long journey abroad, I have
mixed feelings of awe, joy, and humility when looking back on what
it has taken me to write this book. The book began a decade ago as
a doctoral dissertation and reached its present form through vari-
ous incarnations—conference papers, journal articles, book chap-
ters, encyclopedia entries, and manuscript drafts. Along the way
many teachers, colleagues, friends, and relatives have given me sup-
port and encouragement. Without them, the book would not have
been written.
First and foremost, I thank members of my dissertation commit-
tee at the University of Chicago: Professors Edward L. Shaughnessy,
Guy S. Alitto, and Anthony C. Yu. With patience and forbearance,
they guided me through a project that appeared, at the time, to be
exotic. Professor Shaughnessy, my principal advisor, was particularly
helpful in teaching me how to read Yijing commentaries as histori-
cal records. Much of what I intend to prove in this book originated
from his inspiring Yijing seminar in 988, in which each member of
the class was responsible for comparing different interpretations of
a hexagram. His support of my study of Yijing commentaries went
beyond supervising my dissertation. Over the past decade, he has
been assiduous in pushing me to turn my dissertation into a book, and
when the prospect of publishing the book seemed bleak, he reminded
me of my responsibility to write for future readers.
A number of scholars and friends read parts of my dissertation or
drafts of this book, and their comments saved me from making embar-
rassing mistakes. Among them, I must thank Stanley Murashige, my
fellow schoolmate, for teaching me the art of writing. What started off
as a small favor to proofread my dissertation has turned out to be his
most treasured gift of showing me how to write in simple and direct
ix
x Acknowledgments
T his book is about how the educated elite of the Northern Song
(960–27) came to terms with major political and social changes
through commenting upon the Yijing (Book of Changes). By relating
classical commentary with history, this book attempts to link two
different fields of study in premodern China: the study of the Yijing
and the study of the Northern Song. Although the relationship be-
tween the two fields has long been recognized, little effort has been
made to render the relationship explicit. Thus, the goal of this book
is to demonstrate how the Yijing commentaries can be an important
source of information on the momentous political and social changes
of eleventh-century China.
The study of the Yijing, originally developed as part of the mis-
sionaries’ attempt to match Christianity with Confucianism, has been
conducted in a fashion best described as the “book of wisdom” ap-
proach. Even though it has long been known to Western scholars that
the Yijing was originally a divination text in early China and did not
become a Confucian classic until 35 B.C.E.,¹ major Yijing translators
such as Rev. Canon McClatchie, James Legge, and Richard Wilhelm
interpreted the classic as if it were transtemporal. Certainly, this
ahistorical approach has the merit of giving interpreters the liberty to
render the text in ways that are accessible and meaningful to Western
2 The Yijing and Chinese Politics
How am I going to link the two fields of study? To answer this question,
we need to know what the Yijing is about. The Yijing (also known as
Introduction 3
had on Chinese society as a whole, there is little doubt that the social
structure of China in the eleventh century was quite different from that
in the ninth and tenth centuries. As expected, this drastic social change
created anxiety among those who were in the midst of it. Especially for
the people on the upper rungs of the social ladder, the stake was even
higher. If they managed to cruise through what John Chaffee calls “the
thorny gates” of civil service examinations,¹³ they would gain power,
wealth, and prestige, transforming themselves into active players in
governing. But if they were stopped at the thorny gates, they would
remain obscure scholars who might continue to write to lament their
fates or to teach to plant seeds for future change, but they would have
limited impact on government and society. Recently historians such
as Peter Bol, Beverly Bossler, and Tao Jingsheng have found an array
of materials including letters, poems, paintings, funerary writings,
and tomb inscriptions in which the educated elite expressed in clear
terms their hopes and fears of this drastic change.¹⁴
This anxiety about change and the apprehensions about the un-
certain future also contributed to a great number of writings on the
Yijing, the classic that directly dealt with the question of change. For
instance, in the “Yiwen zhi” (Record of Literature and the Arts) of the
Song shi (History of Song), we are informed of more than sixty com-
mentaries written on the Yijing during the Northern Song. Although
many of these commentaries are no longer extant today, the list of
commentators is impressive, including such major cultural figures
as Chen Tuan (?–989), Shi Jie (005–045), Liu Mu (?–?), Shao Yong
(0–077), Hu Yuan (993–059), Ouyang Xiu (007–070), Zhang Zai
(020–077), Wang Anshi (02–086), Sima Guang (09–086), Su
Shi (037–0), Cheng Yi (033–07), and Lü Dalin (046–082?).¹⁵
If we add to this list authors of treatises, essays, and poems about the
Yijing—for instance, Li Gou (009–059) who wrote thirteen essays
on the Yijing, and Fan Zhongyan (989–052) who composed five rhap-
sodic poems (fu) on themes of the Yijing—the number of Northern
Song Yijing exegetes would be staggering.¹⁶ Further evidence of this
tremendous outburst of energy on the Yijing is found in the comments
of the eighteenth-century editors of the Siku quanshu (The Complete
Works of the Emperor’s Four Treasuries). Viewing the history of Yijing
learning as a linear progression of “two schools and six subgroups”
(liangpai liuzong), the editors held the Northern Song in high regard
by linking many of the key developments in Yijing learning to that
period. According to the editors, whether it was the xiangshu (image
6 The Yijing and Chinese Politics
and number) or the yili (principle and meaning) school of Yijing com-
mentary, the Northern Song commentators were well represented, and
many of them (e.g., Chen Tuan, Shao Yong, Hu Yuan, and Cheng Yi)
were in fact pivotal figures in establishing the basic rules for interpret-
ing the Yijing.¹⁷
Yet, despite their huge number and the high honor bestowed on
them in later centuries, the Northern Song Yijing commentaries have
not been studied as voices of change in the way that some historians
have done with letters, poems, paintings, funerary writings, and tomb
inscriptions of the same period. This is partly due to, as discussed
earlier, the “book of wisdom” approach of Yijing studies that presents
the classic as transtemporal and ahistorical. This is also partly due to
the lack of dialogue between scholars in the field of Yijing studies and
the field of Northern Song studies. To fill this void, this book examines
the Yijing commentaries written from the 050s to the 090s, when the
Northern Song educated elite felt most acutely the impact of political
and social change on their lives. Focusing on three exegetes—Hu Yuan,
Zhang Zai, and Cheng Yi—this book examines the debates among the
educated elite over their role as political and social leaders. By com-
paring these three exegetes’ readings of the Yijing with those of their
peers, this book traces the changes in the self-identity of eleventh-
century educated elite, who considered themselves to be corulers of
the empire rather than the emperor’s subservient administrators. This
self-identity of the educated elite was predicated upon an assumption
that only they could fully comprehend the intricacy of human affairs
and that even the emperor himself had to learn from them about the
skills of ruling. This assumption, presumptuous and impractical as it
may seem, won the day in the Northern Song. In this book, we will see
why this assumption appeared to be convincing to the educated elite,
how the assumption acquired new meaning over time as the country’s
fiscal and military crises deepened, and what impact it had made on
the political discourse of the Northern Song.
Synchronic Comparison
Xiu who, like him, were active in calling upon the educated elite to
join the Song government as civil bureaucrats. For Zhang Zai, I com-
pare his commentary with those of Sima Guang and Shao Yong who,
along with him, stressed the importance of inner cultivation to attain
a full vision of one’s role in the universe. For Cheng Yi, I compare his
commentary with Su Shi’s, his archrival within the antireform camp.
Both of them, having spent years in banishment to remote corners of
the country, used the occasion of writing Yijing commentary to reflect
upon the causes of human conflict and the prospect for reconciliation
and harmony.
These comparisons, of course, are not exhaustive. They focus
primarily on what some Yijing scholars may call the yili school of
commentary.³⁴ I also do not include a number of important Northern
Song Yijing exegetes such as Chen Tuan, Liu Mu, and Lü Dalin, who
deserve careful study. Incomplete as they are, these comparisons are
to make explicit the interrelationship between history and classical
commentary—that is, how issues of the day affect an exegete’s reading
of a classic, and how an exegete’s reading of a classic helps to shape the
direction of public debate. These comparisons highlight the variety of
opinions within the same period of time, and the multiple possibilities
of the Yijing to be a forum for political discourse. More importantly,
they call attention to the dramatic changes during the Northern Song
that have received little attention to this day: the destruction of mili-
tary governance in the early Northern Song period; the flourishing of
civil governance in the mid-Northern Song period; and the trials and
tribulations of civil bureaucrats in the late Northern Song period. And
the lives of the three exegetes who serve as the anchors in this book
mirror these important changes.
Born in 993 when the Song court had just solidified its control
over its territory, Hu Yuan belonged to the first generation of Northern
Song educated elite with an acute sense of living in a new era. Having
witnessed the gradual establishment of civil governance, characterized
by large numbers of scholars being admitted into the Song bureaucracy
by passing the civil service examinations, he took it upon himself to
articulate the mission of these new civil bureaucrats, who believed
they ruled the world with the emperor. Thirty-years junior to Hu Yuan,
Zhang Zai grew up at a time when civil governance had been firmly
established and the civil bureaucrats were in full control of the govern-
ment. Unlike Hu Yuan who struggled against the military governance
of pre-Song times, Zhang Zai took civil governance for granted. In his
Introduction
we have to know the textual parameters that the Zhouyi zhengyi had
set for them.
The next three chapters are the heart of the book. Through a
synchronic comparison of selected Yijing commentaries, each chapter
examines major public issues in one particular period of the North-
ern Song. The story that unfolds in these chapters describes what the
Northern Song educated elite had gone through in building civil gov-
ernance to break from the previous practices of militarism. It focuses
our attention on the jubilation of the educated elite in parting ways
with the past and envisioning a perfect human order. It also tells us
about their anxiety, agony, and regrets when dealing with the reality
of politics and the horrendous results of factional rivalry. Together,
these three chapters offer us a glimpse of the hopes and fears of the
eleventh-century educated elite in their attempt to build a new socio-
political order, which was supposed to bring peace and prosperity to
the human community.
In the conclusion, I return to the theme of linking history with
classical commentary. I assess the significance of Northern Song
Yijing exegesis in light of the current scholarship on the Yijing and the
history of eleventh-century China. I suggest that despite occasional
pedantry, the Northern Song Yijing exegetes wrote their commentar-
ies in response to the sociointellectual change of eleventh-century
China, and as such, they contributed significantly to the establishment
and functioning of civil governance. To different degrees, they were
instrumental in fostering the political idealism of Northern Song civil
bureaucrats who expressed their courage and imagination in full force
in the drastic reforms of the mid- and late Northern Song. In hind-
sight, the civil bureaucrats might have overestimated their ability in
establishing a perfect human order. However, even seen from today’s
perspective, their courage to envision a new sociopolitical system is
admirable, and their ability to imagine the unimaginable is what makes
the Northern Song so unique.
1
The Northern Song Historical Context
5