|
|
Author Name: Huang, Ray
Title: China, a MacRo History
Binding: Paperback Publisher: Armonk, N. Y. M. E. Sharpe ISBN Number: 0873324536 / 9780873324533
Seller ID: 1715
From Library Journal&newline; Several good histories of China for general readers have been published in recent years, e. G. , Witold Rodzinski's The Walled Kingdom (Free Pr. , 1984) . Cotterell's book, however, is too amateurish to be among them. It alternates between convention and error and often condenses history in a confusing way. Huang's macro history, on the other hand, is most welcome. It builds a structure of novel interpretation and vivid anecdote on a solid base of original research and covers the whole sweep of Chinese history, making comparative references to Western history. Huang seeks to explain the present Chinese reforms as the culmination of a commercialization trend that has broken down the old peasant society and brought China into the mainstream of world history. It is debatable whether Imperial China was as stagnant as Huang says, and his theory of the breakup of traditional China bears a resemblance to old-fashioned modernization theory. Still, his book is a boldly opinionated, freshly written synthesis that will be read with pleasure and profit by all. Andrew J. Nathan, Columbia Univ. &newline; Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.; 277 pages
Price =
8.99 USD |
|
Add to Shopping Cart
|
|
|
|
<< Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >> |
|
|
|