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Social Order through Contracts - Jian Qu - Bog

- A Study of the Qingshui River Manuscripts

af Jian Qu
Bag om Social Order through Contracts

AbstractDates and Currency I. Introduction 1.The story of the wealthiest 2.Research question: A contract society? 2.1.Economic success, social order, and contracts 2.2.The general puzzle of how and why the contract worked 3.Sources: The Qingshui River region and beyond 3.1.A brief introduction to the Qingshui River manuscripts and their studies 3.1.1. The discovery 3.1.2. Where and when? 3.1.3. The content 3.1.4. Major collections, publications, and state of the field 3.2.Sources in and beyond the Region 3.2.1. Taking the Qingshui River manuscripts as the core source 3.2.2. Wendou, a cluster of villages, the region, and beyond 4.Synopsis and structure of this study II. Rediscovering Contract in the Qingshui River Region 1.Introduction: Standard and borderline contracts 1.1.A general and complex term 1.2."Standard cases" and "borderline cases" 2.Contracts in law and practice 2.1.Contracts in contract laws 2.1.1. Defining contract in laws: A comparative approach 2.1.2. Contracts and the Great Qing Code 2.1.3. Contracts without contract law? 2.2.Categorization of contracts in everyday life 2.2.1. Contractual manuals 2.2.2. A necessary hypothesis 3.Contents of a contract: Beyond agreement i Table of Contents 3.1.The tense of a contract: Future or past? 3.2.The performance of contracts 3.2.1. Contracts need no performance 3.2.2. Producing contracts as the performance 3.3.Championing the past in the future 3.3.1. Negative obligations in the future tense3.3.2. The established and confirmed 3.4.Transcending as an agreement 3.4.1. Contract without agreement? 3.4.2. Jural relations: An external observation 4.Identifying contracts by form: The internal and external4.1.The textual form 4.1.1. Essential elements? The changing and unchanged 4.1.2. Specialized language and formulaic expressions 4.2.The ritual form 4.2.1. Customs of contracting 4.2.2. Textual reflections 4.3.The formulaic beginning of a contract: Indicating and integrating 4.3.1. The formula of the beginning 4.3.2. Integrating the form and content 4.3.3. The indicator as a shortcut 5.Paper matters: The materiality of contracts 5.1.The burning of contracts 5.1.1. The story of Yao the Millionaire 5.1.2. A contract of dispute settlement5.2.The non-conceptual contract: The contract and its material carriers 5.2.1. The abstract and concrete contract 5.2.2. Material carriers other than paper 5.3.The validity of the material: Oral and non-original 5.3.1. Oral contracts 5.3.2. Copies of the contract 6.Conclusion III. Middlemen 1.Introduction: Understanding middlemen within a contract 2.The primary and the secondary: Formation and restoration 2.1.Four roles 2.2.Two levels 3.The primary: Introducers, witnesses, and guarantors 3.1.Introduction 3.1.1. Matchmaking and facilitation 3.1.2. Duzhong ii Table of Contents 3.1.3. Hanzhong3.2.Witnessing 3.3.Guarantee 4.The secondary: Arbitrators and peacemakers 4.1.The "original middleman" 4.2.Arbitration 4.2.1. Fact-finding 4.2.2. Reasoning 4.3.Mediation 5.The middleman as the th

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  • Sprog:
  • Engelsk
  • ISBN:
  • 9789813349469
  • Indbinding:
  • Hardback
  • Sideantal:
  • 284
  • Udgivet:
  • 5. februar 2021
  • Udgave:
  • 12021
  • Størrelse:
  • 242x163x24 mm.
  • Vægt:
  • 582 g.
  • 8-11 hverdage.
  • 16. december 2024
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Beskrivelse af Social Order through Contracts

AbstractDates and Currency
I. Introduction
1.The story of the wealthiest
2.Research question: A contract society?
2.1.Economic success, social order, and contracts
2.2.The general puzzle of how and why the contract worked
3.Sources: The Qingshui River region and beyond
3.1.A brief introduction to the Qingshui River manuscripts and their studies
3.1.1. The discovery
3.1.2. Where and when?
3.1.3. The content
3.1.4. Major collections, publications, and state of the field
3.2.Sources in and beyond the Region
3.2.1. Taking the Qingshui River manuscripts as the core source
3.2.2. Wendou, a cluster of villages, the region, and beyond
4.Synopsis and structure of this study
II. Rediscovering Contract in the Qingshui River Region
1.Introduction: Standard and borderline contracts
1.1.A general and complex term
1.2."Standard cases" and "borderline cases"
2.Contracts in law and practice
2.1.Contracts in contract laws
2.1.1. Defining contract in laws: A comparative approach
2.1.2. Contracts and the Great Qing Code
2.1.3. Contracts without contract law?
2.2.Categorization of contracts in everyday life
2.2.1. Contractual manuals
2.2.2. A necessary hypothesis
3.Contents of a contract: Beyond agreement
i

Table of Contents
3.1.The tense of a contract: Future or past?
3.2.The performance of contracts
3.2.1. Contracts need no performance
3.2.2. Producing contracts as the performance
3.3.Championing the past in the future
3.3.1. Negative obligations in the future tense3.3.2. The established and confirmed
3.4.Transcending as an agreement
3.4.1. Contract without agreement?
3.4.2. Jural relations: An external observation
4.Identifying contracts by form: The internal and external4.1.The textual form
4.1.1. Essential elements? The changing and unchanged
4.1.2. Specialized language and formulaic expressions
4.2.The ritual form
4.2.1. Customs of contracting
4.2.2. Textual reflections
4.3.The formulaic beginning of a contract: Indicating and integrating
4.3.1. The formula of the beginning
4.3.2. Integrating the form and content
4.3.3. The indicator as a shortcut
5.Paper matters: The materiality of contracts
5.1.The burning of contracts
5.1.1. The story of Yao the Millionaire
5.1.2. A contract of dispute settlement5.2.The non-conceptual contract: The contract and its material carriers
5.2.1. The abstract and concrete contract
5.2.2. Material carriers other than paper
5.3.The validity of the material: Oral and non-original
5.3.1. Oral contracts
5.3.2. Copies of the contract
6.Conclusion
III. Middlemen
1.Introduction: Understanding middlemen within a contract
2.The primary and the secondary: Formation and restoration 2.1.Four roles
2.2.Two levels
3.The primary: Introducers, witnesses, and guarantors
3.1.Introduction
3.1.1. Matchmaking and facilitation
3.1.2. Duzhong

ii

Table of Contents
3.1.3. Hanzhong3.2.Witnessing
3.3.Guarantee
4.The secondary: Arbitrators and peacemakers
4.1.The "original middleman"
4.2.Arbitration
4.2.1. Fact-finding
4.2.2. Reasoning
4.3.Mediation
5.The middleman as the th

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