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yangzi
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Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2000) 59 (3): 717–718.
Published: 01 August 2000
...Antonia Finnane Chinese Modernity and the Peasant Path: Semicolonialism and the Northern Yangzi Delta . By Kathy Le Mons Walker . Stanford, Calif. : Stanford University Press , 1999 . ix, 330 pp. $55.00 (cloth). Copyright © The Association for Asian Studies, Inc. 2000 2000 BOOK...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2002) 61 (2): 609–662.
Published: 01 May 2002
... 42 : 606 –35. Beattie Hilary . 1979 . Land and Lineage in China: A Study of T'ung-Ch'eng County, Anhwei, in the Ming and Ch'ing Dynasties . Cambridge : Cambridge University Press . Bernhardt Kathryn . 1992 . Rents, Taxes, and Peasant Resistance: The Lower Yangzi Region, 1840–1950...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1997) 56 (1): 172–174.
Published: 01 February 1997
...Kenneth J. Hammond Imperial China's Last Classical Academies: Social Change in the Lower Yangzi, 1864–1911 . By Barry C. Keenan . Berkeley : University of California, Institute of East Asian Studies , 1994 . xii, 199 pp. $16.00. Copyright © The Association for Asian Studies, Inc...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1989) 48 (1): 100–113.
Published: 01 February 1989
...William Lavely Comment The following is part of a continuing discussion of G. William Skinner's regional systems approach to Chinese society, which was first presented in JAS 24, nos. 1-3 (1964-65). The Spatial Approach to Chinese History: Illustrations from North China and the Upper Yangzi...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1993) 52 (3): 705–707.
Published: 01 August 1993
...Lillian M. Li Rents, Taxes, and Peasant Resistance: The Lower Yangzi Region, 1840–1950 . By Kathryn Bernhardt . Stanford : Stanford University Press , 1992 . xiii, 326 pp. $37.50. Copyright © The Association for Asian Studies, Inc. 1993 1993 BOOK REVIEWS CHINA AND INNER ASIA...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2002) 61 (2): 501–538.
Published: 01 May 2002
.... Europe before 1800, in other words, was much less developed than the last two decades of scholarship have led us to believe, while China before 1800 was much less involuted. To make his case, Pomeranz spotlights England, the most advanced part of Europe, and the Yangzi delta area, the most advanced part...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1985) 44 (2): 271–292.
Published: 01 February 1985
... William S. 1982 . “ International Bullion Flows and the Chinese Economy Circa 1530–1650 ” Past and Present 95 : 68 – 90 . Averill Stephen C. 1983 . “ The Shed People and the Opening of the Yangzi Highlands ” Modern China 9 : 84 – 126 . Bielenstein Hans . 1947 . “ The Census of China...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1986) 45 (4): 681–720.
Published: 01 August 1986
...Gregor Benton Abstract In January 1941 Guomindang forces crushed a New Fourth Army (NFA) column under Xiang Ying and Ye Ting, which had just missed a deadline to get north of the Yangzi River. The Guomindang and the Communist center in Yan'an both wanted Xiang in the north, each for its own reasons...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2021) 80 (1): 99–112.
Published: 01 February 2021
... of this cataclysm on the inhabitants of Luoyang and the surrounding regions is difficult to quantify, and even harder to understand in more personal terms. We know that many of those who did not perish fled to the southeast, crossing the Yangzi River to resettle in the new capital. Later texts refer to this period...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2002) 61 (2): 539–590.
Published: 01 May 2002
... of these errors here, but I will need to go over some of the major examples. Second, a central contention of his review is that his 1990 book, The Peasant Family and Rural Development in the Yangzi Delta, 1350–1988 remains the best framework for understanding the delta's economy over that entire period. Huang...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1998) 57 (4): 1009–1041.
Published: 01 November 1998
... of information, a locus of leisure and social gatherings, an occasional office and marketplace for many practitioners, and an arena where various social forces competed for status and influence. Urbanization in the late Qing dynasty further contributed to the growth of teahouses, especially in the Yangzi River...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1992) 51 (4): 770–796.
Published: 01 November 1992
... local bases. This essay is an exploration of the contours of revolutionary change in the half-century from 1900 to 1950 in Xiaoshan County, Zhejiang Province, a county in the Lower Yangzi region that was for most of this period in the Guomindang, not the Communist sphere (map 1). Copyright ©...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2003) 62 (1): 157–187.
Published: 01 February 2003
... Copyright © The Association for Asian Studies, Inc. 2003 2003 List of References Brenner Robert , and Isett Christopher . 2002 . “ England's Divergence from China's Yangzi Delta: Property Relations, Microeconomics, and Patterns of Development .” Journal of Asian Studies 61...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1999) 58 (2): 492–494.
Published: 01 May 1999
..., Gan Yangzi, Lower Yangzi, and Middle Yangzi) as well as to the timing and character of interethnic wars (which generally show up in orthodox historiography as "rebellions. ") By following the story of the Hakkas and the "shed people" (pengmin, many of whom spoke Hakka), Leong relates migration...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2006) 65 (3): 529–554.
Published: 01 August 2006
... China s people developed, how they took shape in practice, and how different social groups responded to that pluralism and acted as citizens during the Nanjing decade. This article addresses these questions through a focus on civic training and moral education in lower Yangzi region secondary schools...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1989) 48 (1): 90–99.
Published: 01 February 1989
... level, thus indicating the need for substantial interregional trade in grain. But when they found that the Southeast Coast and the Middle Yangzi (a known grainexporting region) were the biggest deficit areas, and poverty-stricken Northwest China was third from the top in foodgrain per capita...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1999) 58 (2): 494–496.
Published: 01 May 1999
... balanced sex ratio, at least in the Lower Yangzi region. This shift in turn strengthened the patrilineal joint family system within China, as women's value in the marriage market increased. This particular change was felt beyond the boundaries of China Proper: the spread of the patrilineal family form...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2007) 66 (4): 1129–1132.
Published: 01 November 2007
... is Falkenhausen's view that the cultural remains of the middle Yangzi area, generally associated with the state of Chu, ought not to be regarded as constituting an independent culture but, at most, a subset of the greater Zhou culture of the Yellow River valley. This view is informed in large part by his own...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2022) 81 (1): 197–199.
Published: 01 February 2022
... centers in Jiangnan and the court in Beijing demanded high-quality timber to erect palaces, build ships, and construct houses. But this timber could only be supplied by a limited number of forests. These were located in the Yangzi highlands, Jiangxi, and, eventually, Hunan and Guizhou. How the Qing Empire...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2012) 71 (3): 679–704.
Published: 01 August 2012
... and commissioned this new crop of statues necessarily had the substantiation of early myth as a conscious goal. A single, very dramatic case study, however, reveals an enormous amount about how these new public monuments are being conjured up. At the juncture of the Han and Yangzi rivers, at the center...
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