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E-grāmata: History of China

3.85/5 (58 ratings by Goodreads)
(City University of New York, USA)
  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Sērija : Blackwell History of the World
  • Izdošanas datums: 23-Jul-2013
  • Izdevniecība: Wiley-Blackwell
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781118473443
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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Sērija : Blackwell History of the World
  • Izdošanas datums: 23-Jul-2013
  • Izdevniecība: Wiley-Blackwell
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781118473443
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Capturing Chinas past in all its complexity, this multi-faceted history portrays China in the context of a larger global world, while incorporating the narratives of Chinese as well as non-Chinese ethnic groups and discussing people traditionally left out of the storypeasants, women, merchants, and artisans.

 





Offers a complete political, economic, social, and cultural history of China, covering the major events and trends Written in a clear and uncomplicated style by a distinguished historian with over four decades of experience teaching undergraduates Examines Chinese history through the lens of global history to better understand how foreign influences affected domestic policies and practices Depicts the role of non-Chinese ethnic groups in China, such as Tibetans and Uyghurs, and analyzes the Mongol and Manchu rulers and their impact on Chinese society Incorporates the narratives of people traditionally left out of Chinese history, including women, peasants, merchants, and artisans



The Blackwell History of the World Series

The goal of this ambitious series is to provide an accessible source of knowledge about the entire human past, for every curious person in every part of the world. It will comprise some two dozen volumes, of which some provide synoptic views of the history of particular regions while others consider the world as a whole during a particular period of time. The volumes are narrative in form, giving balanced attention to social and cultural history (in the broadest sense) as well as to institutional development and political change. Each provides a systematic account of a very large subject, but they are also both imaginative and interpretative. The Series is intended to be accessible to the widest possible readership, and the accessibility of its volumes is matched by the style of presentation and production.
Series Editor's Preface xi
Preface xv
Acknowledgments xix
List of Illustrations
xxi
List of Maps
xxv
A Note on Romanization xxvi
PART I CHINA AMONG "BARBARIANS"
1(122)
1 Early History, to 1027 BCE
3(22)
Land and Settlement
3(2)
Early Mankind
5(1)
Agricultural Revolution in the Neolithic Era
6(6)
Xia: The First Dynasty?
12(4)
The Shang and the Origins of Chinese Civilization
16(1)
Oracle Bones
17(2)
Ritual Objects as Historical Sources
19(2)
Shang Society
21(2)
Notes
23(1)
Further Reading
24(1)
2 Classical China, 1027-256 BCE
25(34)
"Feudalism"?
25(6)
Changes in Social Structure
31(1)
Political Instability in the Eastern Zhou
31(4)
Transformations in the Economy
35(1)
Hundred Schools of Thought
36(2)
Daoism
38(3)
Popular Religions
41(1)
Confucianism
42(6)
Mohism
48(2)
Legalism
50(3)
Book of Odes and Book of Documents
53(3)
Secularization of Arts
56(1)
Notes
57(1)
Further Reading
57(2)
3 The First Chinese Empires, 221 BCE-220 CE
59(38)
Development of the Qin State
61(2)
Qin Achievements
63(3)
Failures of the Qin
66(4)
Han and New Institutions
70(3)
Han Foreign Relations
73(5)
Emperor Wu's Domestic Policies and Their Ramifications
78(3)
Wang Mang: Reformer or Usurper?
81(1)
Restoration of a Weaker Han Dynasty
82(4)
Spiritual and Philosophical Developments in the Han
86(3)
Han Literature and Art
89(7)
Further Reading
96(1)
4 Chaos and Religious and Political Responses, 220-581
97(26)
Three Kingdoms
97(3)
Rise of South China
100(2)
Foreigners and North China
102(2)
Northern Wei
104(5)
Spiritual Developments, Post-Han
109(1)
Buddhism Enters China
110(6)
Literature, Science, and the Arts in a Period of Division
116(5)
Notes
121(1)
Further Reading
121(2)
PART II CHINA AMONG EQUALS
123(86)
5 Restoration of Empire under Sui and Tang, 581-907
125(48)
Sui: First Step in Restoration
127(5)
Disastrous Foreign Campaigns
132(1)
Origins of the Tang
133(2)
Taizong: The Greatest Tang Emperor
135(2)
Tang Expansionism
137(2)
Irregular Successions and the Empress Wu
139(3)
Tang Cosmopolitanism
142(2)
Arrival of Foreign Religions
144(7)
Glorious Tang Arts
151(2)
Decline of the Tang
153(4)
Tang Faces Rebellions
157(1)
Uyghur Empire and Tang
158(2)
Tang's Continuing Decline
160(2)
Suppression of Buddhism
162(2)
Final Collapse
164(2)
Efflorescence of Tang Culture
166(5)
Notes
171(1)
Further Reading
171(2)
6 Post-Tang Society and the Glorious Song, 907-1279
173(36)
Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms
173(4)
Song: A Lesser Empire
177(2)
A New Song Elite
179(3)
Neo-Confucianism: A New Philosophy
182(1)
Attempts at Reform
183(5)
Women and the Song
188(2)
The Khitans and the Liao Dynasty
190(2)
Expansion of Khitan Territory
192(1)
Preservation of Khitan Identity
192(2)
Fall of the Liao
194(1)
Xia and Jin: Two Foreign Dynasties
195(2)
Song Arts
197(5)
Southern Song Economic and Cultural Sophistication and Political Instability
202(4)
Notes
206(1)
Further Reading
206(3)
PART III CHINA AND THE MONGOL WORLD
209(60)
7 Mongol Rule in China, 1234-1368
211(22)
Rise of Chinggis Khan
213(2)
Legacy of Chinggis Khan
215(1)
Expansion and Early Rule of Empire
215(2)
Sorghaghtani Beki, Mongke, and Khubilai
217(1)
Unification of China
218(1)
Khubilai's Policies
219(1)
Multiethnic and Multireligious China
220(2)
Khubilai and Chinese Culture
222(4)
Decline of the Yuan
226(3)
Legacy of the Mongols
229(2)
Notes
231(1)
Further Reading
231(2)
8 Ming: Isolationism and Involvement in the World, 1368-1644
233(36)
A More Powerful State
236(4)
Opening to the Outside World
240(4)
A Costly Failure
244(1)
Conspicuous Consumption
245(1)
Arts in the Ming
246(5)
Neo-Confucianism: School of the Mind
251(2)
A Few Unorthodox Thinkers
253(1)
Ming Literature
254(4)
Buddhism: New Developments
258(1)
Social Development and Material Culture
259(2)
Violence in the Sixteenth Century
261(2)
Fall of the Ming Dynasty
263(4)
Further Reading
267(2)
PART IV CHINA IN GLOBAL HISTORY
269(144)
9 Early Qing: A Manchu Dynasty, 1644-1860
271(30)
Preserving Manchu Identity
275(1)
Kangxi and the Height of the Qing
275(1)
Western Arrival
276(2)
Jesuits in China
278(2)
Expansion of China
280(4)
Qing Cultural Developments
284(3)
Qing Faces Economic Problems
287(2)
Stirrings of Discontent
289(1)
The Western Challenge
290(3)
Opium Wars
293(5)
Explanations for the Decline of the Qing
298(1)
Further Reading
299(2)
10 Late Qing, 1860-1911
301(32)
Nian and Other Minor Rebellions
302(1)
Taiping Rebellion
303(4)
Other Rebellions
307(4)
Foreign Threats
311(2)
Differing Court Responses to Challenges
313(4)
Antiforeign Acts and Foreign Reactions
317(2)
Losses in Southwest China
319(1)
Japan Emerges
320(1)
Sino-Japanese Conflict
321(2)
Scramble for Concessions and US Response
323(1)
China Humiliated and the Reformers
324(2)
Boxer Movement
326(3)
Court Reforms
329(2)
Fall of the Qing
331(1)
Notes
332(1)
Further Reading
332(1)
11 The Republican Period, 1911-1949
333(36)
The 1911 Revolution and Its Aftermath
335(2)
Warlords in Power
337(3)
The May Fourth Movement and Intellectuals in the Post-First World War Period
340(3)
Communist Party
343(3)
Rise of Chiang Kai-shek
346(3)
Guomindang Dominance
349(5)
Communist Party Revival
354(2)
Long March and Aftermath
356(2)
The Sino-Japanese War
358(3)
The Pacific War, the Communists, and the Guomindang
361(3)
Civil War in China
364(2)
Further Reading
366(3)
12 The Communist Era in China, 1949 Onwards
369(44)
Early Pacification of Border Areas
371(3)
Early Foreign Relations
374(2)
Recovery from Wars
376(4)
Cracks in the Communist World
380(2)
Great Leap Forward
382(3)
Return to Pragmatism
385(1)
An Isolated China
386(1)
Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution
387(3)
China Reopens Its Doors
390(5)
Dramatic Changes and Modernization
395(3)
Tiananmen Disturbance of 1989 and Its Aftermath
398(5)
The Present Status of China
403(9)
Further Reading
412(1)
Index 413
Morris Rossabi is Distinguished Professor of History at City University of New York and Adjunct Professor at Columbia University.  Born in Alexandria, Egypt, he received a Ph.D. in Chinese and Central Asian History at Columbia University.  He is the author of many books on Asian history, including Modern Mongolia: From Khans to Commissars to Capitalists (2005), Khubilai Khan: His Life and Times (1988 and 2009), and Voyager from Xanadu: Rabban Sauma and the First Journey from China to the West (1992).  Formerly Chair of the Arts and Cultures Board of the Open Society Institute, he has collaborated on exhibitions at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Cleveland Museum of Art.