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Dolly Yang
  • Ty Yfory, Llanfair road, Lampeter, Ceredigion, SA48 8JZ, Wales, UK
  • +447539719264

Dolly Yang

Independent Researcher, History, Department Member
  • Dolly Yang is a researcher of ancient and medieval Chinese medicine. Her main research explores the social and cultur... moreedit
  • Dr. Vivienne Loedit
This dissertation investigates the development of therapeutic exercise known as daoyin 導引 (guiding and pulling) during the Sui dynasty (581–618 CE). The main research questions are 1) how and why did daoyin become an important component... more
This dissertation investigates the development of therapeutic exercise known as daoyin 導引 (guiding and pulling) during the Sui dynasty (581–618 CE). The main research questions are 1) how and why did daoyin become an important component of state medicine during the Sui period, 2) why was it included systematically in Zhubing yuanhou lun 諸病源候論 (Treatise on the Origins and Symptoms of Medical Disorders), the earliest known nosological text compiled under the decree of the second Sui emperor Yangdi 隋煬帝and 3) in the context of the process of unification during the Sui, what is the larger significance of these initiatives for our understanding of the unique continuities in the history of imperial China?
Central to this research is an investigation into the contemporary political, cultural and religious circumstances that influenced the decisions by the two Sui emperors to adopt therapeutic exercise, which was already widely popular among circles of literate elites and religious sects, into an official medical system. The vision of the second Sui emperor to promote therapeutic exercise as the main component of state medicine, in preference to all other medical treatments, led directly to the transformation of the state medical service with the employment of a disproportionally large number of daoyin specialists to the Sui court. This research argues that the inclusion of daoyin, together with advice on health regimes, under the newly-devised classification of disease in Zhubing yuanhou lun, is one of the most important medical innovations of the Sui. As a vignette that illustrates how the role of the state can extend its reach into social and community practice, this study also has wider implications for how, in contrast to the fragmentation of Europe after the fall of Rome, we understand the continuity of empire in China.
Research Interests:
Zhubing yuanhou lun 諸病源候論 (Treatise on the Origins and Systems of all Diseases), compiled at the decree of the Emperor Yang of the Sui dynasty (581-618 C.E.). In this text reading workshop, Dolly Yang investigates the development during... more
Zhubing yuanhou lun 諸病源候論 (Treatise on the Origins and Systems of all Diseases), compiled at the decree of the Emperor Yang of the Sui dynasty (581-618 C.E.). In this text reading workshop, Dolly Yang investigates the development during the Sui dynasty (581-618 C.E.) of a particular tradition of exercises known as daoyin 導引. Daoyin literally means guiding and pulling. It works on the qi, the vital force in all living beings, to create a harmonious condition within. It often involves stretching and contracting the body and limbs, uses breath and intention to 'pull' deviant qi out of the body, and self-massage, thereby restoring or enhancing harmony and good health. Her analysis focuses on changes in the interpretation, significance and practices of daoyin, and the way the term and its practices change in different contexts. Chen Hao revisits the debate on authorship of Treatise on the Origins and Symptoms of all Diseases from records of tomb inscriptions, and tries to find a book history of this medical manual in a historical and cultural context of producing books in Sui court. Moreover, they raise questions about how to understand a medical manual between cultural practices, producing, reading, citing and copying it, and bodily practices recorded in it.
Research Interests:
This article studies the Taiqing jinye shendan jing 太清金液神丹經 (Grand Clarity Scripture of Divine Elixir Made from Liquid Gold, hereafter Scripture of Liquid Gold), attributed to Ge Hong 葛洪 (283–343 CE), to examine the intersection of... more
This article studies the Taiqing jinye shendan jing 太清金液神丹經 (Grand Clarity Scripture of Divine Elixir Made from Liquid Gold, hereafter Scripture of Liquid Gold), attributed to Ge Hong 葛洪 (283–343 CE), to examine the intersection of religion, science and medicine in China. Passages from the Scripture of Liquid Gold describe the healing powers of drugs and highlight ways medieval writers imagined the transmission of medical knowledge, as well as the specific places producing potent substances. The text provides a view that contravenes standard narratives of foreign medical migration that vector into China via Buddhist channels. As such, we argue that it provides a novel view of medical migration in its time period. As one of the early sources on physical geography and trade goods from Southeast Asia, it is an important resource for early knowledge of the region and is one of the earliest examples of possible Daoist religio-technical continuities between the regions.
This article preprint examines the intersection of religion, science, medicine and historical geography in China through a study of the Taiqing jinye shendan jing 太清金液神丹經 (Grand Clarity Scripture of Divine Elixir Made from Liquid Gold),... more
This article preprint examines the intersection of religion, science, medicine and historical geography in China through a study of the Taiqing jinye shendan jing 太清金液神丹經 (Grand Clarity Scripture of Divine Elixir Made from Liquid Gold), attributed to Ge Hong 葛洪 (283-343 CE). The text provides a gaze which contravenes standard narratives of foreign medical migration that vector into China via Buddhist channels. Passages from the Scripture describe the healing powers of non-Chinese drugs, and highlight ways medieval writers imagined the transmission of medical knowledge, as well as the specific places producing potent substances. As such, we argue that it provides a novel view on medical migration in its time period. As one of the early sources on physical geography and trade goods from Southeast Asia, it is an important resource for early knowledge of the region, and is one of the earliest examples of possible Daoist religio-technical continuities between the regions.
The “family resemblance” between the Chinese therapeutic exercises known as daoyin (lit. “guiding and pulling”), and the Indian breathing and physical movement practices later known as haṭhayoga is marked, and would appear to be the... more
The “family resemblance” between the Chinese therapeutic exercises known as daoyin (lit. “guiding and pulling”), and the Indian breathing and physical movement practices later known as haṭhayoga is marked, and would appear to be the result of the transfer of knowledge and culture, in parallel with merchandise, along the Silk Roads and sea routes. China possessed a rich tradition of yangsheng self-cultivation teachings on breathing, sexual techniques and therapeutic exercises from the 3rd century BCE onwards. The complexities of haṭhayoga were not, however, laid bare until the 11th century CE when it was described in the Amṛtasiddhi, the earliest extant haṭhayoga text. Daoyin reached its zenith during the Sui dynasty (581–618 CE), while later on various esoteric doctrines known as neidan (“inner alchemy”) became prominent. These became the major source for those hoping to achieve longevity and immortality and they preceded haṭhayoga by about two centuries. Neidan may well have formed...
The manuscript Yin Shu (The Book of Pulling), excavated from Zhangjiashan Han Tomb No. 247, is the earliest surviving text on therapeutic exercise known as Dao Yin (lit. guiding and pulling). Discovered in 1983, this Dao Yin text,... more
The manuscript Yin Shu (The Book of Pulling), excavated from Zhangjiashan Han Tomb No. 247, is the earliest surviving text on therapeutic exercise known as Dao Yin (lit. guiding and pulling). Discovered in 1983, this Dao Yin text, together with the
drawings of 44 figures performing “guiding and pulling” exercises found in the Mawangdui Han Tomb in 1974, are of great significance to the study of the early history of Dao Yin. Prior to these discoveries, researchers into Dao Yin relied mainly on
material found in the Dao Zang (the Daoist Canon), compiled in 1145. This led to their conclusion that Dao Yin was essentially Daoist. The development of Dao Yin reached its zenith during the Sui Dynasty (581–618 CE), when it became one of the three medical departments at the imperial medical education institution. As part of the medical reform of the second Sui Emperor, Yang Di, Dao Yin became the treatment of choice, and the employment of a large number of Dao Yin specialists to the Sui court transformed the state medical service. The compilation of Zhu Bing Yuan Hou Lun (Treatise on the Origins and Manifestations of Various Diseases) under Yang Di’s decree, incorporated an abundance of resources on Dao Yin, enabling physicians to potentially “prescribe” Dao Yin to their patients. Situating both Yin Shu and Zhu Bing Yuan Hou Lun in their social and historical contexts, this article analyses their editorial treatments, examines their different objectives, styles, and readerships, and compares the various exercises described in the two texts. It emphasizes the fact that over a period of nearly a thousand years, from the late Warring States (475–221 BCE) to the Sui and Tang periods, Dao Yin was an important medical practice, culminating in its institutionalization by the Sui government.
ABSTRACT A translation and synopsis of the seventh-century medical recipe cave inscriptions at the Longmen Caverns.
Critical Translation of over 150 recipes carved into the walls of a cave in Longmen Cave, near Loyang in the 7th century. These likely represent Buddhist transmitted recipes, and were certainly presented in a context of Buddhist... more
Critical Translation of over 150 recipes carved into the walls of a cave in Longmen Cave, near Loyang in the 7th century.  These likely represent  Buddhist transmitted recipes, and were certainly presented in a context of Buddhist merit-building monuments.  Some identical recipes also appear in other received and excavated texts, indicating that these recipes, or their source(s), were more widely spread as part of the Buddhist diaspora into China.
The recipes are simple and straightforward, presented in a regularised, organised fashion, and use commonly available materials.
Interview by Daniel Spigelman, Purple Cloud Podcast (Jan 31, 2019)
Research Interests:
The Routledge Handbook of Chinese Medicine is an extensive, interdisciplinary guide to the nature of traditional medicine and healing in the Chinese cultural region, and its plural epistemologies. Established experts and the next... more
The Routledge Handbook of Chinese Medicine is an extensive, interdisciplinary guide to the nature of traditional medicine and healing in the Chinese cultural region, and its plural epistemologies. Established experts and the next generation of scholars interpret the ways in which Chinese medicine has been understood and portrayed from the beginning of the empire (third century BCE) to the globalisation of Chinese products and practices in the present day, taking in subjects from ancient medical writings to therapeutic movement, to talismans for healing and traditional medicines that have inspired global solutions to contemporary epidemics. The volume is divided into seven parts:

● Longue Durée and Formation of Institutions and Traditions
● Sickness and Healing
● Food and Sex
● Spiritual and Orthodox Religious Practices
● The World of Sinographic Medicine
● Wider Diasporas
● Negotiating Modernity

This handbook therefore introduces the broad range of ideas and techniques that comprise pre-modern medicine in China, and the historiographical and ethnographic approaches that have illuminated them. It will prove a useful resource to students and scholars of Chinese studies, and the history of medicine and anthropology. It will also be of interest to practitioners, patients, and specialists wishing to refresh their knowledge with the latest developments in the field.
Special issue of Asian Medicine with a focus on COVID-19 and epidemics in Asian Medicine. The issue is Open Access in response to the pandemic, and all the papers can be downloaded from the URL below or from the link in this page.... more
Special issue of Asian Medicine with a focus on COVID-19 and epidemics in Asian Medicine. The issue is Open Access in response to the pandemic, and all the papers can be downloaded from the URL below or from the link in this page.
https://brill.com/view/journals/asme/16/1/asme.16.issue-1.xml

Articles are both contemporary and historical, and discuss the following themes:

Early COVID pandemic in Wuhan and TCM responses-presenting the research studies done on herbal remedies and public health response.
Institutional difference in Traditional Korean medicine in Korea.
Responses in Tibetan communities in North America and nosological definitions amid global Sowa Rigpa research networks.
A literary reflection from an ICU ward in Singapore.
A preliminary history of Zoonotic Theory in China.
Epidemics in Seventeenth-Century Siam.
Buddist perceptions of and ritual responses to epidemic in early modern China, Japan and Tibet.