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Shifts of Power

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In Shifts of Power: Modern Chinese Thought and Society, Luo Zhitian brings together nine essays to explore the causes and consequences of various shifts of power in modern Chinese society, includin...
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  • 08 November 2018
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In Shifts of Power: Modern Chinese Thought and Society, Luo Zhitian brings together nine essays to explore the causes and consequences of various shifts of power in modern Chinese society, including the shift from scholars to intellectuals, from the traditional state to the modern state, and from the people to society. Adopting a microhistorical approach, Luo situates these shifts at the intersection of social change and intellectual evolution in the midst of modern China’s culture wars with the West. Those culture wars produced new problems for China, but also provided some new intellectual resources as Chinese scholars and intellectuals grappled with the collisions and convergences of old and new in late Qing and early Republican China.
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Price: $56.00
Pages: 444
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Brill's Humanities in China Library
Publication Date: 08 November 2018
ISBN: 9789004393592
Format: Paperback
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Luo Zhitian, Ph.D. (1994), Princeton University, is Professor of History at Beijing University and Sichuan University. He has published more than a dozen books and one hundred articles, including Inheritance within Rupture: Culture and Scholarship in Early Twentieth-Century China (Brill, 2015).

Lane J. Harris, Ph.D. (2012), University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, is Associate Professor of History at Furman University. His work on communications systems in Chinese history has appeared in the Journal of Asian Studies, the Journal of Early Modern History, Ming Studies, and Twentieth-Century China.

Mei Chun, Ph.D. (2005), Washington University in Saint Louis, is a scholar and translator of Chinese literature, an Associate of the University Center for International Studies at the University of Pittsburgh, and author of The Novel and Theatrical Imagination in Early Modern China (Brill, 2011).