Yung-ti Li is associate professor in East Asian languages and civilizations at the University of Chicago.
I believe this work to be of great significance to the field. Nothing like it has been published for Early China in English, and it establishes the groundwork for future synthetic studies of Shang craft working and economy. Kingly Crafts will be used as an authoritative work for many years to come. -- Roderick B. Campbell, author of <i>Violence, Kinship and the Early Chinese State: The Shang and their World</i> Li Yung-ti shifts through a century's worth of archaeological data to reconstruct the most up-to-date blueprint for the Shang Dynasty's last capital as a complex and likely planned urban environment-one that integrates layers of elite and non-elite craft production precincts. His vision is fresh and clear-eyed on what the material cultural record can or cannot really tell us-unafraid to question a few of the favored historical-cultural myths. -- Constance A. Cook, author of <i>Ancestors, Kings, and the Dao</i> This is a much anticipated, synthetic study of craftworking at Anyang focusing the Kingly Crafts -especially bronze, bone, ivory, shell and marble. With masterly command of available archaeological data accumulated from 90 years of field investigation and in graceful prose, Li Yung-ti skillfully brings to life the large-scale craft workshop tradition that served the high elite. -- Katheryn Linduff, University of Pittsburgh Anyang has been excavated every year for nearly a century, and yet the last book-length study in a European language is forty-five years old. Yung-ti Li's book brings the study of the last capital of the Shang dynasty, the most important location for understanding Chinese civilization at the end of the second millennium BCE, into the twenty-first century. The political and ritual center is shown to be a unique urban nexus of an elite population. Using bronze vessels and inscribed bones, as well as jade, turquoise, lacquer, shells, and wild and exotic animals, the author reconstructs the inner-workings of Shang society as only a scholar who is also an excavator can. -- Nancy Shatzman Steinhardt, author of <i>The Borders of Chinese Architecture</i> Kingly Crafts is a rich and comprehensive study of craft and art works excavated at Anyang, the last royal center of the Shang Dynasty. Most noteworthy about the book is the variety of crafts it considers. A substantial work. -- Ying Wang, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee