Perspectives on Modern China: Four AnniversariesRoutledge, 2016年9月16日 - 448 頁 The conveners (the editors of this book) of the September 1989 Four Anniversaries China Conference in Annapolis, asked the contributors to look back from that point in time to consider four major events in modern Chinese history in the perspective of the rapid changes that were shaping the Chinese society, economy, polity, and sense of place in the world in the 1980s, a time when China was making rapid strides toward becoming more integrated with the outside world. With contributions by distinguished scholars in the field, the four anniversaries considered are the High Qing, the May Fourth Movement, forty years of communism in China, and ten years of the Deng era. |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 82 筆
第 頁
... elite support and shallower specific loyalties than equivalent European kingships. The emperor owned the empire, and hence only he could effect reform. This created a craving for the achievement of societywide justice "through the ...
... elite support and shallower specific loyalties than equivalent European kingships. The emperor owned the empire, and hence only he could effect reform. This created a craving for the achievement of societywide justice "through the ...
第 頁
... elite on the eve of the Opium War was not—as Woodside would have it—a bureaucratic stratum ideologically dependent upon a despotic emperor. Rather, Tu asserts, Confucian intellecutals "constructed their own cultural identity" by ...
... elite on the eve of the Opium War was not—as Woodside would have it—a bureaucratic stratum ideologically dependent upon a despotic emperor. Rather, Tu asserts, Confucian intellecutals "constructed their own cultural identity" by ...
第 頁
... elite as well as of the peasantry. The myth of human perfection for which the emperors were political stand-ins facilitated an anthropocentric humanism in which the elite had a strong investment. This had little to do with the size of ...
... elite as well as of the peasantry. The myth of human perfection for which the emperors were political stand-ins facilitated an anthropocentric humanism in which the elite had a strong investment. This had little to do with the size of ...
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... elite idea about kingship that really did work its way downward into the popular imagination, where simpler versions of it took root. The Communist revolutionary Peng Pai discovered to his chagrin in the 1920s that the largely ...
... elite idea about kingship that really did work its way downward into the popular imagination, where simpler versions of it took root. The Communist revolutionary Peng Pai discovered to his chagrin in the 1920s that the largely ...
第 頁
... the State The coexistence of the Chinese emperorship with the ideal of a nonhereditary political elite was always far from perfect. The possibility that the emperors themselves might refeudalize Chinese politics at the very top, through.
... the State The coexistence of the Chinese emperorship with the ideal of a nonhereditary political elite was always far from perfect. The possibility that the emperors themselves might refeudalize Chinese politics at the very top, through.
內容
Models of Historical Change The Chinese State and Society 18391989 | |
The Enlightenment Mentality and the Chinese Intellectual Dilemma | |
Part Two May Fourth Anniversary | |
The Social Agenda of May Fourth | |
Modernity and Its Discontents The Cultural Agenda of the May Fourth Movement | |
The May Fourth Era Chinas Place in the World | |
Part Three The PRCs First Forty Years | |
The Pattern and Legacy of Economic Growth in the Mao | |
State and Society in the Mao | |
Chinese Communism in the Era of Mao Zedong 19491976 | |
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常見字詞
administrative agricultural areas Beijing bureaucratic cadres Cambridge capital central century changes Chen Chen Duxiu Chinese culture Chinese intellectuals Chinese political Chinese society chubanshe Communist party Confucian created Cultural Revolution decade Deng Deng Xiaoping domestic dominated dynasty economic efforts elite emperors Enlightenment enterprises essay forces foreign Fourth Movement Frederic Wakeman groups growth Guomindang Hong Ibid ideological impact important income increased industrial institutions investment Japan kaifang labor late imperial leadership Liang Qichao Lin Biao major Mao Zedong Mao's military Ming mobilization Modern China Nationalist officials opening Opium War organizational organizations output peasants Peng People's Republic percent period police popular population post-Mao problems production provinces public security Qing dynasty reform regions revolutionary ritual role rural sector Shandong Shanghai Sichuan social socialist Soviet Union Stanford Taiwan trade traditional University Press urban Western Yuan Zhejiang Zhongguo