Cultural Interaction Studies in East Asia : : New Methods and Perspectives.

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Global East Asia. ; v.9
:
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Gottingen : : Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht,, 2021.
©2021.
Year of Publication:2021
Edition:1st ed.
Language:English
Series:Global East Asia.
Physical Description:1 online resource (325 pages)
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Table of Contents:
  • Intro
  • Title Page
  • Copyright
  • Table of Contents
  • TAO Demin: Introduction
  • Body
  • New Directions in Regional Studies
  • NOMA Haruo: The Center and Periphery in the Magnetic Field of Cultural Systems: New Perspectives on Regional Research
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Regional Fieldwork in Japan in the Twentieth Century
  • A. Outline of Asian Regional Fieldwork in Prewar Japan
  • B. Asian Regional Fieldwork in Postwar Japan: Starting from Loss of the Field
  • C. Theories on Laurel Forest Culture and its Broader Context
  • D. Path toward a Global Theory
  • III. The New Outlook Called "Magnetic Field of Cultural Systems"
  • IV. Hypothesizing Centrality and Networks
  • V. Formulation of the Substance of Peripheral Regions
  • A. Huế as the Periphery in the Nguyễn Dynasty: An Example of an Urban Region
  • B. Northeastern China (Manchuria) as the Periphery: Example of an Agricultural Village Area
  • VI. Conclusion: Regional Scales and Fieldwork
  • Bibliography
  • HUANG Chun-Chieh: Some Observations on the Study of the History of Cultural Interactions in East Asia
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Reflections on Methodology
  • A. East Asia as a Contact Zone
  • B. The New Purview in Regional History: The Turn from Results to Process
  • C. The Relationship among Global History, Regional History, and National History
  • D. The Contextual Turn in the Study of Regional History
  • III. Problematiques
  • A. Interactions of Self and Other in the History of Cultural Exchange in East Asia
  • B. Interactions between Cultural Exchange and the Power Structure in East Asia
  • IV. Possible Research Topics
  • A. Exchange of People: Professional Intermediate Agents and Their Observations of Others
  • B. Exchange of Goods, Especially Texts
  • C. Exchange of Ideas
  • V. Conclusion
  • Bibliography
  • SHIBA Yoshinobu: Japanese Studies into the History of Maritime East Asia.
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Methodologies
  • III. Postwar Trends in Research
  • A. Search for an Integrative History of the World (World History)
  • B. Need for Developing Interdisciplinary Research
  • IV. Conclusion
  • New Trends in Humanities Research
  • GE Zhaoguang: Trends, Positions and Methods: Seeking New Perspectives in Humanities Research
  • I. What Does Intellectual History Tell Us?
  • II. International Perspectives: From "Studies in China's Neighboring Countries" to "Viewing China within the Frame of Neighboring Countries"
  • III. The Position of China in Comparison with Overseas Sinology
  • IV. Breaking Self-Confinement: Cross-study Analyses of Different Cultures
  • V. Prospects for Humanities Research-New Materials, Methods and Models
  • AZUMA Jūji: The Private Academies of East Asia: Research Perspectives and Overview
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Why Study Private Academies?
  • III. The Neo-Confucian Doctrines of the Zhu Xi School and Education
  • A. View of humans and view of learning
  • B. The purpose and method of study
  • C. Confirming convictions: Resolving
  • D. View of education: Renovating the people
  • E. The educational curriculum and texts: the Four Books and the Five Classics
  • F. The liberation of education
  • G. Criticism of the civil-service examination
  • H. Instruction and private academies
  • IV. The Place of Private Academies
  • V. Research Perspectives
  • Bibliography
  • UCHIDA Keiichi: The Peripheral Approach in Chinese Linguistics as an Area of Cultural Interaction Studies
  • I. The Peripheral Approach
  • II. The Validity of Peripheral Sources
  • A. Chinese Linguistic Studies by Europeans
  • B. Validity of European Chinese Language Research Sources
  • C. Specific Content of Peripheral Sources
  • III. Periphery and Center.
  • A. The Periphery and Center in Linguistic Research: The Relationship between the Discrete and the General or the Specific and Universal
  • B. The Individual as the General and Uniqueness as Universality: Empty/Substantive Theory (Xushilun)
  • IV. The Future of Cultural Translation in Cultural Interaction Studies
  • Bibliography
  • Material Circulation and Cultural Transmission in East Asia
  • NAKANISHI Susumu: Embassies and Ideas as the Third Type of Cargo
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Cargoes of Cultural Artifacts and People
  • III. Three Types of Ideational Cargo
  • IV. Another Conveyor of Culture
  • V. Conclusion
  • WANG Yong: The Silk Road and Book Road in East Asia
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Hints from the Shōsōin Collection
  • III. Silk Trade in the Eighth Century
  • IV. Silk as Currency
  • V. The Envoys' Mission
  • VI. The Zenith of the Book Road
  • VII. East Asian Currents
  • VIII. Conclusion
  • MATSUURA Akira: Chinese Sea Merchants and Pirates
  • I. Introduction: The Course of Research in Chinese Maritime History
  • II. Problems Concerning Chinese Sea Merchants
  • A. The Business of Chinese Sea Merchants
  • B. Cargo Carried by Chinese Ships
  • C. The Construction of Chinese Ships
  • D. Chinese Piracy
  • III. Sea Merchants and Pirates in the Tang, Song, and Yuan Dynasties
  • A. The Origins of Chinese Overseas Trade
  • B. Birth of the Maritime Trade Supervisor
  • C. Expansion of Overseas Trade
  • D. Sea Merchants, Pirates, and Trade Supervisors in the Southern Song
  • E. The Sea and the People of the Plains
  • F. South Sea Trade in the Yuan Dynasty
  • IV. Sea Merchants and Pirates in the Ming Dynasty
  • A. Maritime Trade in the Ming Dynasty
  • B. Pirates and Wokou in the Ming Dynasty
  • C. The Reality of Chinese Pirates in the Ming Dynasty
  • D. The Expansion of Trade in the South China Sea
  • V. Sea Merchants and Pirates in the Qing Dynasty.
  • A. Maritime Trade in the Qing Dynasty
  • B. Chinese Sailing Ships in the Qing Dynasty
  • C. Piracy in the Qing Dynasty
  • VI. Conclusion
  • China's Experience of Cultural Interaction with the West
  • ZHOU Zhenhe: Culture Surmounting Space: Sino-Western Cultural Encounters and Adaptations from the Sixteenth to Nineteenth Centuries
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Cultural Interaction between China and Catholic Nations
  • III. Cultural Interaction between China and Protestant Nations
  • IV. The Rise of Sinology in the West and Western Studies in China
  • ZHANG Xiping: Returning to a Dialog of Equals
  • I. Introduction: The West's Discovery of China
  • II. Achievements of Jesuits Who Went to China
  • A. Transmission of Western Learning to the East
  • B. Transmission of Chinese Culture to the West
  • III. Mutual Understanding between the East and the West
  • IV. Deterioration of Sino-Western Relations
  • V. Some Reflections
  • SHEN Guowei: Modern Keywords and the Modern History of Ideas
  • I. Modern Keywords
  • II. The Acceptance of New Concepts from the West
  • III. The Usefulness of Chinese Linguistic Databases
  • IV. Western Learning from the East and Japanese Knowledge
  • V. Some Remarks on the Keyword Kexue
  • Transformation of Japanese Scholarship from Early Modern to Modern Times
  • CHOI Gwan: War, Memory, and Imagination: Japanese Depictions of the Imjin War
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Early Modern Japan and the Imjin War
  • A. Types of Accounts in the Initial Period
  • B. Military Chronicles on Korea
  • C. Dramatization of Battle Scenes
  • III. Modern Japan and the Imjin War
  • A. Modern Japan and the Imjin War
  • B. Contemporary Japan and the Imjin War
  • IV. Conclusion
  • FUJITA Takao: The Establishment of the Field of "Oriental History" in Japan: Facilitating Understanding of East Asian Studies in Modern Japan
  • I. Introduction.
  • II. Establishment of Modern Japanese Historical Research
  • III. The Birth and Background of Oriental History Studies
  • IV. Unique Characteristics of the Study of Oriental History
  • V. Conclusion: "Oriental History" and "Chinese History"
  • SUZUKI Sadami: A Reevaluation of the East Asian Modern System of Knowledge
  • I. The Need for and Significance of Research on the History of Concept Formation
  • II. Reevaluating the Knowledge System in East Asia
  • III. Peculiarities of the Use of "Japanese Literature"
  • IV. The Fine Arts versus the Arts
  • V. Conclusion
  • YAN Shaodang: A Reconsideration of Japanese China Studies
  • I. Introduction
  • II. A Proposal for "China Studies"
  • III. Value of Japanese China Studies
  • IV. Japanese China Studies in the Global Context
  • V. Sources and Text Versions
  • The Wisdom of Selective Adaptation and Constructive Dialog
  • TANG Yijie: The Coexistence of Cultural Diversity: Sources of the Value of Harmony in Diversity
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Harmony in Diversity
  • III. Commonalities across Cultural Traditions
  • IV. Regional Diversity and the Bidirectional Nature of Cultural Selection
  • V. Conclusion
  • TAO Demin: Abraham Lincoln's Reception and Destiny in East Asia
  • I. Introduction: Lincoln's Attitude toward China and Japan
  • II. The Spread of the Lincoln Story from Tokyo
  • III. China's Opposition Party Leaders' Embrace of the Gettysburg Address
  • IV. The Uses of Lincoln in Diplomatic Interchanges between the United States and East Asia
  • Contributors
  • Translators
  • FUJITA Takao: Afterword
  • Notes about this new edition
  • Index.