Papers by Stephen O'Harrow
Language Problems and Language Planning, 1982
Bulletin de l'École française d'Extrême-Orient, 1986
O'Harrow Stephen. Men of Hu, Men of Han, Men of the hundred man. In: Bulletin de l'Ecole ... more O'Harrow Stephen. Men of Hu, Men of Han, Men of the hundred man. In: Bulletin de l'Ecole française d'Extrême-Orient. Tome 75, 1986. pp. 249-266
Pacific Affairs, 1988
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Routledge eBooks, Mar 10, 2021
The Modern Language Journal, Sep 1, 1973
Biography, 1999
Illustrated in a series of events in the fictional early life of the "King of the Elephants,... more Illustrated in a series of events in the fictional early life of the "King of the Elephants," author Jean de Brunhoff (1899-1937) created Babar, a multifarious character, facets of which have charmed juvenile as well as adult readers, both in French and in foreign translation, for several generations. The humanity and bourgeois domesticity of de Brunhoff's pachydermal universe, however, mask a basically colonialist perception of the world, one which accurately reflected the de Brunhoffs' social milieu, the zeitgeist in the first third of the twentieth century, and Republican France's complex attitudes towards being a colonial power.
The Journal of Asian Studies, Feb 1, 1987

Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, Mar 1, 1979
The question of a national identity for Vietnam has long plagued historians, both Vietnamese and ... more The question of a national identity for Vietnam has long plagued historians, both Vietnamese and foreign. Some see Vietnam throughout its pre-modern history as a minor appendage of the Chinese Empire, one whose culture and institutions are so thoroughly influenced by the Chinese tradition that they evade meaningful individual scrutiny. A few apply the tools of Sinology in such a way as to reach conclusions which, while cogent in themselves, cannot escape the confines of their methodology. Others, including a majority of scholars from Vietnam itself, reject the former view and are continuously searching for evidence to demonstrate the uniqueness of the Vietnamese experience. There is little merit in the a priori assumptions of either school, but this does not invalidate the question. It would be of particular interest to know not simply whether some significant differences existed between Vietnamese and Chinese institutions at various points throughout history but whether these institutional differences had a significant bearing on a sense of nationalism and whether such differences resulted at least partially from a selfconception on the part of Vietnamese thinkers, one consciously held and pursued. The Binh Ngo Dai Cao provides us with some intriguing clues. It is, as well, a narrative document of great literary worth and the subject of constant allusion, the background of which could bear illumination for purely historical interest.
University of Hawaii Press eBooks, Dec 31, 1996
... BAH CHU CAI NGUYEN AM: AAA EE l Y 0 6 O U IT PHUAM: BC CH D G/GH Gl H K KH LM N NH NG/NGH PH ... more ... BAH CHU CAI NGUYEN AM: AAA EE l Y 0 6 O U IT PHUAM: BC CH D G/GH Gl H K KH LM N NH NG/NGH PH QU RS T TH TR VX DAU: SAC HUYEN NGA ... la ma ma ma ma ma ma na na na na na na ra ra ra ra r§ ra sa sa sa sa sa sa ta ta te ta ta ta thi / thur thif thOf thu-thy va va ...
'Male' and 'Female' in Developing Southeast Asia, 2021

Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 1979
The question of a national identity for Vietnam has long plagued historians, both Vietnamese and ... more The question of a national identity for Vietnam has long plagued historians, both Vietnamese and foreign. Some see Vietnam throughout its pre-modern history as a minor appendage of the Chinese Empire, one whose culture and institutions are so thoroughly influenced by the Chinese tradition that they evade meaningful individual scrutiny. A few apply the tools of Sinology in such a way as to reach conclusions which, while cogent in themselves, cannot escape the confines of their methodology. Others, including a majority of scholars from Vietnam itself, reject the former view and are continuously searching for evidence to demonstrate the uniqueness of the Vietnamese experience. There is little merit in the a priori assumptions of either school, but this does not invalidate the question. It would be of particular interest to know not simply whether some significant differences existed between Vietnamese and Chinese institutions at various points throughout history but whether these insti...
The Journal of Asian Studies, 1987
The Journal of Asian Studies, 1988
... author examines the striking roles women play in the novels and persuasively argues that wome... more ... author examines the striking roles women play in the novels and persuasively argues that women function not only as simple characters but also as symbols of Vietnamese culture and tradition, particularly in the novels of Nguyen Phan Long, Tran Van Tung, and Pham Van Ky. ...
Bulletin de l'Ecole française d'Extrême-Orient, 1986
... history of China, in the celebrated rivalry of the states of Wu (or Ngo ^ ) Yueh (Viet 1? ) d... more ... history of China, in the celebrated rivalry of the states of Wu (or Ngo ^ ) Yueh (Viet 1? ) during ... IE) of Ssu-ma Ch'ien were probably known to Nguyen Trai, a gentleman of broad learning in the ... legends, so allusions to it in a public document such as the Binh Ngo Dai Cao would ...
Sojourn: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia, 2017
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Papers by Stephen O'Harrow