The Chinese Revolution in Historical PerspectiveBloomsbury Academic, 2004年1月30日 - 316 頁 This fully updated second edition provides a succinct and self-contained history of China. The text emphasizes the relationship between China's modern era and its past, employing a unique approach that presents the story in terms of traditional Chinese historical theories. When the West enters the scene in modern times, Schrecker fits its impact into the Chinese story, rather than the reverse, as is commonly done. This study demonstrates that traditional China was not homogeneous or changeless, thus offering a much-needed corrective to common stereotypes about other cultures that is essential for both classroom use and for the general reader. |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 62 筆
... nationalism . Other reasons why the term " nationalist " has been avoided are historical . First of all , the Qing , the dynasty in power when Western imperialism began , was for- eign . Therefore , as we shall see , it emphasized the ...
... Nationalist government ultimately failed to retain control of China , and he and his efforts to do so have often received a bad press . Nonetheless , the Nationalist regime made some progress toward solving China's problems . Chiang did ...
... Nationalist era and the rise of the Communists , the most useful have been Conrad Brandt , Benjamin Schwartz , and J. K. Fairbank , eds . , A Documentary History of Chinese Communism ( Cambridge , Mass . , 1952 ) ; Lloyd Eastman , The ...
內容
Ancient China and the Development of Chinese Thought | 3 |
Junxian China | 33 |
Foreigners and the West | 75 |
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