Selected Product: | China's Imperial Past: An Introduction to Chinese History and Culture Paperback Edition: 1 Author: Charles Hucker Publisher: Stanford University Press Release Date: 1995-01-01 ISBN-10: 0804723532 ISBN-13: 9780804723534 List Price: $31.95 Average Customer Rating: | | Three Kingdoms: Chinese Classics (Classic Novel in 4-Volumes) ISBN-10: 7119005901 ISBN-13: 9787119005904 List Price:$44.95 The Analects (Penguin Classics) ISBN-10: 0140443487 ISBN-13: 9780140443486 List Price:$12.00 Daily Life in China on the Eve of the Mongol Invasion, 1250-1276 (Daily Life) ISBN-10: 0804707200 ISBN-13: 9780804707206 List Price:$20.95 The Inner Quarters: Marriage and the Lives of Chinese Women in the Sung Period ISBN-10: 0520081587 ISBN-13: 9780520081581 List Price:$25.95 China's Examination Hell: The Civil Service Examinations of Imperial China ISBN-10: 0300026390 ISBN-13: 9780300026399 List Price:$20.00 |
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A work unique in the sweep of its design and scope, intended expressly for the general reader interested in human history and culture, this is a vivid panoramic survey of the vast course of Chinese civilization from prehistory to 1850, when the old China began the agonizing transition to the new. Historical surveys of China tend to be dynasty-by-dynasty chronicles with a profusion of names and dates and occaisional cultural tidbits, or to concentrate on the period from earliest times to the Han dynasty (or the T’ang), giving only scant coverage to the last thousand years. China’s Imperial Past
is different. Not only does it treat the three major periods of Chinese history at roughly equal length, weaving all their complexity into a balanced, integrated whole, but it gives ample space to China’s magnificent literary and artistic achievements.
The author’s approach is primarily interpretive, emphasizing patterns of change and development rather than factual details, but he never loses sight of the particularities that made traditional Chinese civilization one of the richest in human history. Especially notable are the many translations of Chinese poetry, among them more than twenty exquisite poems from the great poets of the T’ang.
The author divides Chinese history into three major epochs: a formative age, from high antiquity to the unification of China under the Ch’in in the third century B.C.; an early imperial age, from the Han dynasty (202 B.C.-A.D. 220) through the T’ang (618-907) and its breakdown; and a later imperial age, from the Sung dynasty (960-1279) to the mid-nineteenth century. Each major epoch is considered in topical chapters—on general history, political institutions, socioeconomic organization, religion and thought, and literature and the arts. A brief Epilogue comments on aspects of Chinese history since 1850.
The book includes 47 plates, eight maps, and various charts, and as appendixes and unusually detailed chronological table, notes on the Chines language, and suggestions for supplementary reading.
Worth buying! | Customer Rating: | | For me China is just a matter of personal interest - no academic or business motivation. What's the most interesting is to understand the foundations of culture, of social structures, customs and behaviours. With the organisation of this book I could easily pick up the pieces which I consider the most relevant. Having read quite a number of books on the subject I finally found the explanations of several intriguing aspects of Chinese culture, which in the other sources were presented in a "as a matter of fact" mode! | A very good introduction to Chinese history | Customer Rating: | | This book is clearly written and covers competently a broad range of topics. The author follows a topical format (as opposed to a strictly chronological) and discusses in turn general political history, social and political structures, intellectual life, arts and literature. All are described fairly well, though the coverage of some personalities is sketchy perhaps because of space limitations. But the author is clearly very knowledge and provides an adequate amount of critical analysis (in addition to the merely descriptive) so that one doesn't lose sight of the bigger picture. |
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