Welcome to Loot.co.za!
Sign in / Register |Wishlists & Gift Vouchers |Help | Advanced search
|
Your cart is empty |
|||
Showing 1 - 4 of 4 matches in All Departments
China's role in world history is again controversial thanks to Andre Gunder Frank's Re Orient: Global Economy in the Asian Age. By contrast, this book presents an alternative interpretation of that role, less exclusively economic, more broadly based, and focused on the T'ang period, one of China's acknowledged golden ages. It shows how a different China, Buddhist or Taoist rather than Confucian, aristocratic as much as meritocratic, achieved, through openness to the outside world and partnership with its elites, a multiple pre eminence in politics, economics, society and the intellect, not unlike that enjoyed by the United States today. Within a looser web of globalization, the T'ang period and its dynamics offers a distant mirror of our own time. An argument in world history may thus cast light on issues in contemporary politics. MARKET 1: Undergraduates and postgraduates studying courses in Chinese History; World History; Macroeconomic History.
This revised edition provides a new preface to this highly popular book. The theme of the book is China's relations with the non-Chinese world, not only political and economic, but cultural, social and technological as well. It seeks to show that China's history is part of everyone's history. In particular it traces China's relationship since the thirteenth century to the emergent world order and the various world institutions of which that order is composed. Each chapter discusses China's comparative place in the world, the avenues of contact between China and other civilizations, and who and what passed along those channels.
China's role in world history has been controversial, especially as
seen through an economic lens. This book presents an alternative
interpretation of that role, less exclusively economic, more
broadly based, and focused on the T'ang period, one of China's
acknowledged golden ages. It shows how a different China, Buddhist
or Taoist rather than Confucian, aristocratic as much as
meritocratic, achieved, through openness to the outside world and
partnership with its elites, a multiple preeminence in politics,
economics, society and the intellect, not unlike that enjoyed by
the United States today. Within a looser web of globalization, the
T'ang period and its dynamics offers a distant mirror of our own
time, casting a new light on issues in contemporary politics.
This revised edition provides a new preface to this highly popular book. The theme of the book is China's relations with the non-Chinese world, not only political and economic, but cultural, social and technological as well. It seeks to show that China's history is part of everyone's history. In particular it traces China's relationship since the thirteenth century to the emergent world order and the various world institutions of which that order is composed. Each chapter discusses China's comparative place in the world, the avenues of contact between China and other civilizations, and who and what passed along those channels.
|
You may like...
Books as Bodies and as Sacred Beings
James W. Watts, Yohan Yoo
Hardcover
R2,564
Discovery Miles 25 640
Being Called - Scientific, Secular, and…
David Bryce Yaden, Theo D. McCall, …
Hardcover
R1,964
Discovery Miles 19 640
The Crisis of the Holy - Challenges and…
Alon Goshen-Gottstein
Hardcover
R2,452
Discovery Miles 24 520
Communicating Religion and Atheism in…
Jenny Vorpahl, Dirk Schuster
Hardcover
R3,586
Discovery Miles 35 860
Religion and War - Exploring the Issues
Timothy J Demy, Gina Granados Palmer
Hardcover
R1,347
Discovery Miles 13 470
|