Asia, Case Studies in the Social Sciences: A Guide for TeachingMyron L. Cohen M.E. Sharpe, 1992 - 626 頁 The material in this study is covered by Myron L. Cohen on religion and family organization in China; John R. Bowen on family, kinship, and Islam in Indonesia; Robert W. Hefner on hierarchy and stratification in Java; and Nancy Rosenberger on gender roles in Japan. Further material is provided by William W. Kelly on rural society in Japan; Theodore C. Bestor on urban life in Japan; Stephen R. Smith on the family in Japan; Doranne Jacobson on gender relations in India; Lawrence A. Babb on religion in India; Owen M. Lynch on stratification, inequality, and the caste system in India; Laurell Kendall on changing gender relations in Korea; Andrew G. Walder on comparative revolution in China and Vietnam, Maoism, and the sociology of work in China and Japan; Moni Nag on the comparative demography of China, Japan, and India; and Helen Hardacre on the new religions of Japan. Other contributors offering information through case studies are Hiroshi Ishida on stratification and mobility in Japan; Robert C. Liebman on work and education compared in Japan and the US; Joseph W. Elder on education, urban society, urban problems, and industrial society in India; Andrew J. Nathan on totalitarianism, authoritarianism, and democracy in China; Jean C. Oi on mobilisation and participation in China; Edwin A. Winckler on political development in Taiwan; Carl H. Lande on political parties and representation in the Philippines; Clark N. Neher on political development and political participation in Thailand; and Benedict R. O'G. Anderson on political culture, the military, and authoritarianism in Indonesia. The final chapters of this work include studies by Stephen Philip Cohen on the military in India and Pakistan; Paul R. Brass on democracy and political participation in India; T.J. Pempel on Japanese democracy and political culture, political parties and representation, and bureaucracy in Japan; Han-kyo Kim on political development in South Korea; and Thomas G. Rawski on the economies of China and Japan. |
內容
XXXIV | 356 |
XXXV | 358 |
XXXVI | 374 |
XXXVII | 388 |
XXXVIII | 400 |
XXXIX | 411 |
XL | 423 |
XLI | 425 |
XVI | 112 |
XVII | 123 |
XVIII | 133 |
XIX | 150 |
XX | 164 |
XXI | 181 |
XXII | 183 |
XXIII | 229 |
XXV | 231 |
XXVI | 253 |
XXVII | 263 |
XXVIII | 278 |
XXIX | 294 |
XXX | 307 |
XXXI | 319 |
XXXII | 332 |
XXXIII | 345 |
XLII | 435 |
XLIII | 444 |
XLIV | 455 |
XLV | 468 |
XLVI | 489 |
XLVII | 500 |
XLVIII | 510 |
XLIX | 522 |
L | 533 |
LI | 544 |
LII | 563 |
LIII | 580 |
LIV | 590 |
LV | 599 |
LVI | 617 |
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常見字詞
agricultural American areas army Asia Asian authoritarian Brahman Buddhism burakumin bureaucratic caste CENTRAL POINTS century China Chinese cities colonial Communist Confucian cultural Cultural Revolution democracy democratic dominant economic elections elite employment enterprises factors faculty background firms force gender groups growth hierarchy Hindu Hinduism household ideology important India Indonesian industrial institutions Islam ISSUES FOR DISCUSSION Japan Japanese jāti Java kinship Korea labor leaders MAJOR TOPICS male Maoism marriage ment military mobility modern movement Muslim Nationalist officials organization Pakistan participation patterns peasant percent period political parties popular population postwar practices production Qur'an reform regime relatively religion religious revolution ritual role rural sector SELECTED READINGS social society South Korea status structure student reading Suharto Sukarno Taiwan tion traditional United University Press urban village Western women workers
熱門章節
第 496 頁 - We must at present do our best to form a class who may be interpreters between us and the millions whom we govern; a class of persons, Indian in blood and colour, but English in taste, in opinions, in morals, and in intellect.
第 496 頁 - ... medical doctrines which would disgrace an English farrier, astronomy which would, move laughter in girls at an English boarding school, history abounding with kings thirty feet high and reigns thirty thousand years long, and geography made of seas of treacle and seas of butter.
第 48 頁 - She should do nothing independently, even in her own house. In childhood subject to her father, in youth to her husband, And when her husband is dead, to her sons, she should never enjoy independence. . . . Though he be uncouth and prone to pleasure, though he have no good points at all, the virtuous wife should ever worship her lord as a god.
第 50 頁 - Another ancient text, the Mahabharata, says: Even a man in the grip of rage will not be harsh to a woman, remembering that on her depend the joys of love, happiness, and virtue. For woman is the everlasting field, in which the Self is born.
第 478 頁 - ... habit and doctrine put a premium on the growth of population, which appears to western eyes unnatural and artificial. Sentiment, hallowed by immemorial tradition, makes it a duty to leave sons, and the communism of the patriarchal family dissociates the production of children from responsibility for their maintenance. Hence prudential restraints act with less force than elsewhere ; and population, instead of being checked by the gradual tightening of economic pressure on individuals, plunges...
第 60 頁 - Four years later the Report of the Committee on the Status of Women in India...
第 366 頁 - Peers, with its undemocratic privileges for the British nobility, was a powerful impediment to democratic government until the reforms of 1911. Universal male suffrage was severely restricted in Britain until 1884 and in much of the rest of Europe until after World War I; women did not get the right to vote in the United States until 1920, in Britain until 1929, in France until 1945, and in Switzerland until the 1970s. Union organizers had to confront hostile police, courts, and private security...
第 230 頁 - ... development of a supportive system of labor-management relations. Business entrepreneurs were and are the engine of growth. At the same time, the government is given credit for having pursued...
第 472 頁 - Duncan define demography as the "study of the size, territorial distribution, and composition of population, changes therein, and the components of such changes, which may be identified as natality, mortality, territorial movement (migration), and social mobility (change of status).