Deconstruction of/Counter-discourse to "New" Qing Hisotry
Pei Huang , Reorienting the Manchus: A Study of Sinicization 1583-1796 (Cornell East Asia Series) , 2011
Making extensive use of Chinese, Japanese, Manchu, and Western sources, the author adopts a historical multifaceted approach to explore the various forces geography, economics, frontier contacts, political andsocial institutions; language, literature and art; religion and Confucianism that made possible the Manchu adoption of Chinese ways of life.
Contents
Qing Reign Periods
List of Heavenly Stems and Earthly Branches
List of Illustrations and Translated Poems
List of Maps and Tables
Explanatory Note
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Theme and Approach
2. Contents and Sources.
Chapter I The Ancestry and Ethnic Composition of the Manchus 31
1. Manchuria: Its Geography and Early Inhabitants 31
2. The Role of the Jurchens 36
3. Components 44
Chapter II The Founding of the Qing Dynasty
1. The Rise of Nurhaci
2. Hong Taiji's Leadership
3. Takeover
Chapter III Economic Forces
1. The Influence of Geography
2. The Agricultural Effect
3. Frontier Markets
4. Tributary Relations
Chapter IV Frontiersmen and Transfrontiersmen 127
1. Frontier Society of Liaodong 127
2. Frontiersmen 136
3. Transfrontiersmen 145
Chapter V The Rise of Administrative and Legal Institutions 173
1. Administrative Machinery 174
2. Legal Institutions 186
Chapter VI Transformation of Social Institutions 205
1. Changes in the Family and Customs 205
2. Decline of Manchu Martial Values 213
Chapter VII Manchu Language and Literature
1. Language
2. Literature
Chapter VIII Architecture, Religion, and Confucianism
1. Architecture
2. Religion
3. Confucianism
Conclusion
Glossary
Bibliography
Index
-------------------------
Pei Hung taught at the history department , Youngstown State University. He is the author of Autocracy at Work: A Study of the Yung-Cheng Period, 1723-35 , Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1974.
沒有留言:
張貼留言