Zhāng Shìnán 張世南 (fl. 1214–1233; CBDB id 29559), Guāngshū 光叔, was a late-Southern-Sòng bǐjì writer of Póyáng 鄱陽 (modern Jiāngxī). The catalog meta (and one strain of transmission) gives his name as 張士南 (Zhāng Shìnán with a different shì); Chén Zhènsūn’s Shū lù jiě tí records Shìnán with the graph. He served at Yǒngfú 永福 county in Fújiàn (the bǐjì records many Yǒngfú affairs). He associated with 劉過 (Liú Guò), Gāo Zhú 高翥, Zhào Fán 趙蕃, and 韓淲 (Hán Biāo); he is closely tied through marriage to the 程迥 (Chéng Jiǒng) school — his brother having been Dǒng Wěi 董煟’s son-in-law and Dǒng Wěi having been Chéng Jiǒng’s son-in-law — and accordingly records much of Chéng Jiǒng’s transmitted teaching. His one surviving work is the Yóu huàn jì wén 游宦紀聞 (KR3j0119) in 10 juàn, internally dated Jiādìng jiǎxū (1214) and Shàodìng guǐsì (1233) — placing him as a Níngzōng / Lǐzōng figure. The book records “old hearings” with no political commentary, including major contributions to kǎozhèng on Qín Guān, Sū Shì, Huáng Tíngjiān, the Bā shí yī shǒu of Huáng Bósī, the Bǎi liù of Wáng Shì, and on xī jiǎo, lóng xián (ambergris), Duān inkstones, and antiquarian connoisseurship.