Description
State and Society in Early Medieval China
Edited by Albert E. Dien
Extending roughly from the final collapse of the Han Dynasty in A.D. 220 to the establishment of the T'ang Dynasty in 618, the Six Dynasties period in China is commonly compared to the "Dark Ages" of European history.
The political history of the period is a dismal record of disunity, intrigue, strife, and alien encroachments, seeming to amount to little more than a confusing series of dynastic names. Given such an array of fragile ands short-lived dynasties, it is natural to attempt to summarize the period, but the inadequate state of our knowledge (the historical record is sparse, fragmentary, and very difficult to interpret) makes such an attempt at best provisional.
The twelve essays in this volume are therefore to be viewed as attempts to further our knowledge of the period and to test what few generalizations we do have. The authors address a wide range of problems, including the composition of the ruling elites, the evolution of eminent families, and the nature of the state and its administration. For example, previous scholarship has portrayed the period as one dominated by powerful aristocratic clans; a revisionist view presented here argues that the leading families were neither powerful, nor aristocratic, nor clans. In almost every case the topics of the individual papers are treated here for the first time in English
The period of the Six Dynasties suggests fragmentation and disorder, and yet it is now generally recognized that the so-called fragmentation simply meant that the level of cohesion had shifted from a national to a regional level. To a large extent, what was involved were changes in the ways in which various social and political groups related to one another. The focus of this volume, then, is to explore the interfaces within Six Dynasties social and political organizations and to trace the changes in the these complex and often puzzling relationships. The editor suggests that in these developments are to be found the roots of T'ang greatness.
The contributors are William Crowell, Albert E. Dien, Patricia Ebrey, Dennis Grafflin, Jennifer Holmgren, Whalen Lai, Carl Leban, Mao Hankuang, Richard Mather, Robert M. Somers, and Tang Changru.
Albert E. Dien is Professor of Chinese at Stanford University.
This is a reproduction edition from a scanned copy of the following original edition:
Title State and society in early medieval China
Author Albert E. Dien
Editor Albert E. Dien
Contributor Albert E. Dien
Edition illustrated
Publisher Stanford University Press, 1991
ISBN 0804717451, 9780804717458
Length 414 pages
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Tags:
stanford, university, press, Lo-yang, Northern Wei, Six Dynasties, Eastern Jin, Western Wei, Huan Wen, Southern Dynasties, Jin shu, North China Plain, Wei shu, Hou Han shu, Ch'i, Emperor Wu, corvee, Confucian, eunuchs, gozoku, commandery, marriage, Southern Yan