Rafe de Crespigny, Ph.D. (1968) of the Australian National University, is Professor of Asian Studies at that university and a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities. He has published monographs, translations and many articles on China, including A Biographical Dictionary of Later Han to the Three Kingdoms (Brill, 2007).
Winner of the Stanislas Julien prize for 2011.
Choice Outstanding Academic Title 2011
This impressive volume is the culmination of a lifetime's work on
Cao Cao, the Later Han chancellor, Three
Kingdoms warlord, and, posthumously, Wei emperor. De Crespigny's
study is the definitive work on this critical
figure in any language. The image of Cao Cao and several of his
defeated opponents has been shaped in the popular
mind by subsequent fictionalizations, most recently in a major
film, that are now core mythologies in Chinese culture.
De Crespigny (Australian National Univ.) deals sensitively with the
complex historical and literary issues involved in
explaining Cao Cao, working through a thicket of frequently hostile
sources with erudition and fairness. In addition
to providing a painstaking narrative of the political and military
events of Cao Cao's life, the author also devotes
considerable attention to explaining the historiographical and
literary issues involved in studying Cao Cao, summing
up with the aptly titled section "Why Cao Cao?" The only regret one
has in reading this book is that there isn't more
scholarship like it available. Summing Up: Essential.
Upper-division undergraduates and above.
-- P. Lorge, Vanderbilt University, CHOICE June 2011
'Rafe de Crespigny’s meticulous biography of Cao Cao provides a
full, detailed, carefully sourced and dispassionate account of the
most powerful and controversial Chinese statesman (...)'
PETER HARRIS, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
Journal of Asian Studies, 14, 1 (June 2012)
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