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Technology, Gender and History in Imperial China - Great Transformations Reconsidered (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,535
Discovery Miles 15 350
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Technology, Gender and History in Imperial China - Great Transformations Reconsidered (Paperback)
Series: Asia's Transformations/Critical Asian Scholarship
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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What can the history of technology contribute to our understanding
of late imperial China? Most stories about technology in pre-modern
China follow a well-worn plot: in about 1400 after an early ferment
of creativity that made it the most technologically sophisticated
civilisation in the world, China entered an era of technical
lethargy and decline. But how are we to reconcile this tale, which
portrays China in the Ming and Qing dynasties as a dying giant that
had outgrown its own strength, with the wealth of counterevidence
affirming that the country remained rich, vigorous and powerful at
least until the end of the eighteenth century? Does this seeming
contradiction mean that the stagnation story is simply wrong, or
perhaps that technology was irrelevant to how imperial society
worked? Or does it imply that historians of technology should ask
better questions about what technology was, what it did and what it
meant in pre-modern societies like late imperial China? In this
book, Francesca Bray explores subjects such as technology and
ethics, technology and gendered subjectivities (both female and
male), and technology and statecraft to illuminate how material
settings and practices shaped topographies of everyday experience
and ideologies of government, techniques of the self and
technologies of the subject. Examining technologies ranging from
ploughing and weaving to drawing pictures, building a house,
prescribing medicine or composing a text, this book offers a rich
insight into the interplay between the micro- and macro-politics of
everyday life and the workings of governmentality in late imperial
China, showing that gender principles were woven into the very
fabric of empire, from cosmology and ideologies of rule to the
material foundations of the state and the everyday practices of the
domestic sphere. This authoritative text will be welcomed by
students and scholars of Chinese history, as well as those working
on global history and the histories of gender, technology and
agriculture. Furthermore, it will be of great use to those
interested in social and cultural anthropology and material
culture.
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