Remapping China: Fissures in Historical Terrain

封面
Stanford University Press, 1996 - 333 頁
This stimulating collection traces the intellectual trajectory of the field of modern Chinese history over the past two decades. The possibility of conducting research in the People's Republic and directly exchanging views with scholars there has radically altered and increased the material available to historians. The essays also reflect the efforts of a generation of China historians to engage questions that have recently preoccupied historians across national fields. Each essay challenges previous interpretive frameworks. Topics covered include the impact of imperialism on China, the role of women in Chinese history, the meaning of modernity, the relationship between local and national identities, and the significance of the 1949 revolution.

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Introduction I
1
Framing Plague in Chinas Past
27
A MingQing Transition in Chinese Womens History?
42
An EarlyQing Confucian
59
Sexing Modern China 77
77
SinoMuslim Identity
97
New Perspectives on the Qing Frontier
113
Taiwan
130
Competition and Cooperation in Late Imperial China
156
Public Maneuverings and the State
164
Treaty Ports and Regional
181
The Presence of the FindeSiècle in the May Fourth Era
194
Reflections
210
Another Yanan Way
242
Field Notes from the Present
261
Notes
277

Native Place and the Making of Chinese Ethnicity
143

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