Since its first publication, Paul A. Cohen's "Discovering
History in China" has occupied a singular place in American China
scholarship. Translated into three East Asian languages, the volume
has become essential to the study of China from the early
nineteenth century to today.
Cohen critiques the work of leading postwar scholars and is
especially adamant about not reading China through the lens of
Western history. To this end, he uncovers the strong ethnocentric
bias pervading the three major conceptual frameworks of American
scholarship of the 1950s and 1960s: the impact-response,
modernization, and imperialism approaches. In place of these, Cohen
favors a "China-centered" approach in which historians understand
Chinese history on its own terms, paying close attention to Chinese
historical trajectories and Chinese perceptions of their problems,
rather than a set of expectations derived from Western history. In
an important new introduction, Cohen reflects on his fifty-year
career as a historian of China and discusses major recent trends in
the field. Although some of these developments challenge a narrowly
conceived China-centered approach, insofar as they enable more
balanced comparisons between China and the West and recast the
Chinese and their history in more human, less exotic terms, they
powerfully affirm the central thrust of Cohen's work.
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