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Dating from the seventeenth century at the height of the Ming
Dynasty, the Selden Map of China reveals a country very different
from popular conceptions of the time, looking not inward to the
Asian landmass but outward to the sea. Painted in multiple colours
on three pieces of Mitsumata paper, this beautifully decorative map
of China was discovered to be a seafaring chart showing Ming
Dynasty trade routes. It is the earliest surviving example of
Chinese merchant cartography and is evidence that Ming China was
outward-looking, capitalistic and vibrant. Exploring the commercial
aims of the Ming Dynasty, the port city of Quanzhou and its
connections with the voyages of the early traveller Zheng He, this
book describes the historical background of the era in which the
map was used. It also includes an analysis of the skills and
techniques involved in Chinese map-making and the significance of
the compass bearings, scale and ratios found on the map, all of
which combine to represent a breakthrough in cartographic
techniques. The enthralling story revealed by this extraordinary
artefact is central to an understanding of the long history of
China's relationship with the sea and with the wider world.
Despite the implementation of numerous reform policies, moral
education in China remains problematic. This study presents a
student perspective on the dilemma of the moral education
curriculum in a Chinese secondary school. Dr. Hongping Annie Nie
finds that the school system does not provide a favorable setting
for students to adopt the officially desired ideology and values in
terms of activities, interpersonal relations, and role
expectations. Dr. Nie believes that the dilemma of the moral
education curriculum observed in this study is a reflection of the
dilemmas that exist at every level of Chinese society.
Despite the implementation of numerous reform policies, moral
education in China remains problematic. This study presents a
student perspective on the dilemma of the moral education
curriculum in a Chinese secondary school. Dr. Hongping Annie Nie
finds that the school system does not provide a favorable setting
for students to adopt the officially desired ideology and values in
terms of activities, interpersonal relations, and role
expectations. Dr. Nie believes that the dilemma of the moral
education curriculum observed in this study is a reflection of the
dilemmas that exist at every level of Chinese society.
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