Daniel McMahon
China's Borderlands under the Qing, 1644-1912
Perspectives and Approaches in the Investigation of Imperial Boundary Regions
Daniel McMahon
China's Borderlands under the Qing, 1644-1912
Perspectives and Approaches in the Investigation of Imperial Boundary Regions
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This book explores new directions in the study of China's borderlands. In addition to assessing the influential perspectives of other historians, it engages innovative approaches in the author's own research.
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This book explores new directions in the study of China's borderlands. In addition to assessing the influential perspectives of other historians, it engages innovative approaches in the author's own research.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Jenny Stanford Publishing
- Seitenzahl: 220
- Erscheinungstermin: 16. Februar 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 155mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 454g
- ISBN-13: 9780367696566
- ISBN-10: 0367696568
- Artikelnr.: 60354032
- Verlag: Jenny Stanford Publishing
- Seitenzahl: 220
- Erscheinungstermin: 16. Februar 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 155mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 454g
- ISBN-13: 9780367696566
- ISBN-10: 0367696568
- Artikelnr.: 60354032
Daniel McMahon is a professor in the Department of History at Fu Jen Catholic University, Taiwan
Introduction
PART I Historiographical perspectives
1. Perspectives in North American Research on Qing China's frontiers
PART II Conceptual perspectives
2. Were the Miao Kings "Prophets of Renewal"? The case of the 1795-1797
Hunan Miao revolt
3. The middle ground, "middle ground moments," and accommodation in the
study of later Qing borderland history
PART III New military history
4. Geomancy and walled fortifications on a late eighteenth-century Qing
borderland
5. Fortified walls and social ordering in Qing China's early Jiaqing
borderland revolts
PART IV Political discourse analysis
6. Treachery at imperial edges: criminality and bureaucratic classification
as jian in middle Qing China
7. Marking "men of iniquity": imperial purpose and imagined boundaries in
the Qing processing of rebel ringleaders, 1786-1828
Appendix 1. Translation: Yan Ruyi's "Conditions and customs in the
mountains"
PART I Historiographical perspectives
1. Perspectives in North American Research on Qing China's frontiers
PART II Conceptual perspectives
2. Were the Miao Kings "Prophets of Renewal"? The case of the 1795-1797
Hunan Miao revolt
3. The middle ground, "middle ground moments," and accommodation in the
study of later Qing borderland history
PART III New military history
4. Geomancy and walled fortifications on a late eighteenth-century Qing
borderland
5. Fortified walls and social ordering in Qing China's early Jiaqing
borderland revolts
PART IV Political discourse analysis
6. Treachery at imperial edges: criminality and bureaucratic classification
as jian in middle Qing China
7. Marking "men of iniquity": imperial purpose and imagined boundaries in
the Qing processing of rebel ringleaders, 1786-1828
Appendix 1. Translation: Yan Ruyi's "Conditions and customs in the
mountains"
Introduction
PART I Historiographical perspectives
1. Perspectives in North American Research on Qing China's frontiers
PART II Conceptual perspectives
2. Were the Miao Kings "Prophets of Renewal"? The case of the 1795-1797 Hunan Miao revolt
3. The middle ground, "middle ground moments," and accommodation in the study of later Qing borderland history
PART III New military history
4. Geomancy and walled fortifications on a late eighteenth-century Qing borderland
5. Fortified walls and social ordering in Qing China's early Jiaqing borderland revolts
PART IV Political discourse analysis
6. Treachery at imperial edges: criminality and bureaucratic classification as jian in middle Qing China
7. Marking "men of iniquity": imperial purpose and imagined boundaries in the Qing processing of rebel ringleaders, 1786-1828
Appendix 1. Translation: Yan Ruyi's "Conditions and customs in the mountains"
PART I Historiographical perspectives
1. Perspectives in North American Research on Qing China's frontiers
PART II Conceptual perspectives
2. Were the Miao Kings "Prophets of Renewal"? The case of the 1795-1797 Hunan Miao revolt
3. The middle ground, "middle ground moments," and accommodation in the study of later Qing borderland history
PART III New military history
4. Geomancy and walled fortifications on a late eighteenth-century Qing borderland
5. Fortified walls and social ordering in Qing China's early Jiaqing borderland revolts
PART IV Political discourse analysis
6. Treachery at imperial edges: criminality and bureaucratic classification as jian in middle Qing China
7. Marking "men of iniquity": imperial purpose and imagined boundaries in the Qing processing of rebel ringleaders, 1786-1828
Appendix 1. Translation: Yan Ruyi's "Conditions and customs in the mountains"
Introduction
PART I Historiographical perspectives
1. Perspectives in North American Research on Qing China's frontiers
PART II Conceptual perspectives
2. Were the Miao Kings "Prophets of Renewal"? The case of the 1795-1797
Hunan Miao revolt
3. The middle ground, "middle ground moments," and accommodation in the
study of later Qing borderland history
PART III New military history
4. Geomancy and walled fortifications on a late eighteenth-century Qing
borderland
5. Fortified walls and social ordering in Qing China's early Jiaqing
borderland revolts
PART IV Political discourse analysis
6. Treachery at imperial edges: criminality and bureaucratic classification
as jian in middle Qing China
7. Marking "men of iniquity": imperial purpose and imagined boundaries in
the Qing processing of rebel ringleaders, 1786-1828
Appendix 1. Translation: Yan Ruyi's "Conditions and customs in the
mountains"
PART I Historiographical perspectives
1. Perspectives in North American Research on Qing China's frontiers
PART II Conceptual perspectives
2. Were the Miao Kings "Prophets of Renewal"? The case of the 1795-1797
Hunan Miao revolt
3. The middle ground, "middle ground moments," and accommodation in the
study of later Qing borderland history
PART III New military history
4. Geomancy and walled fortifications on a late eighteenth-century Qing
borderland
5. Fortified walls and social ordering in Qing China's early Jiaqing
borderland revolts
PART IV Political discourse analysis
6. Treachery at imperial edges: criminality and bureaucratic classification
as jian in middle Qing China
7. Marking "men of iniquity": imperial purpose and imagined boundaries in
the Qing processing of rebel ringleaders, 1786-1828
Appendix 1. Translation: Yan Ruyi's "Conditions and customs in the
mountains"
Introduction
PART I Historiographical perspectives
1. Perspectives in North American Research on Qing China's frontiers
PART II Conceptual perspectives
2. Were the Miao Kings "Prophets of Renewal"? The case of the 1795-1797 Hunan Miao revolt
3. The middle ground, "middle ground moments," and accommodation in the study of later Qing borderland history
PART III New military history
4. Geomancy and walled fortifications on a late eighteenth-century Qing borderland
5. Fortified walls and social ordering in Qing China's early Jiaqing borderland revolts
PART IV Political discourse analysis
6. Treachery at imperial edges: criminality and bureaucratic classification as jian in middle Qing China
7. Marking "men of iniquity": imperial purpose and imagined boundaries in the Qing processing of rebel ringleaders, 1786-1828
Appendix 1. Translation: Yan Ruyi's "Conditions and customs in the mountains"
PART I Historiographical perspectives
1. Perspectives in North American Research on Qing China's frontiers
PART II Conceptual perspectives
2. Were the Miao Kings "Prophets of Renewal"? The case of the 1795-1797 Hunan Miao revolt
3. The middle ground, "middle ground moments," and accommodation in the study of later Qing borderland history
PART III New military history
4. Geomancy and walled fortifications on a late eighteenth-century Qing borderland
5. Fortified walls and social ordering in Qing China's early Jiaqing borderland revolts
PART IV Political discourse analysis
6. Treachery at imperial edges: criminality and bureaucratic classification as jian in middle Qing China
7. Marking "men of iniquity": imperial purpose and imagined boundaries in the Qing processing of rebel ringleaders, 1786-1828
Appendix 1. Translation: Yan Ruyi's "Conditions and customs in the mountains"