1. Chuang Chi-fa. “Ch'ing-tai Min-Yüeh ti-ch'u ti she-hui ching-chi pien-i yü pi-mi hui-tang ti fa-chan.” In Ti erh chieh kuo-chi Han-hsüeh hui-i lun-wen chi: Ming, Ch'ing, yü chin-tai li tsu. Nankang: Academia Sinica, 1989.
2. Lee James and Campbell Cameron , Fate and fortune in rural China: Social organization and population behavior in Liaoning, 1774–1873 (Cambridge, 1997), ch. 3.
3. Ch'en Hsüeh-wen. “Ming-Ch'ing shih-ch'i Chiang-nan ti i-ke ch'uan-yeh shih-chen.” Chung-kuo she-hui ching-chi shih yen-chiu, I (1985).
4. Averill Steven. “The shed people and the opening of the Yangzi highlands.” Modern China, 9, No. I (January 1983).
5. Dardess John. A Ming society: T'ai-ho county, Kiangsi, fourteenth to seventeenth centuries. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996.