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The way of the barbarians : redrawing ethnic boundaries in Tang and Song China / Shao-yun Yang.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Seattle : University of Washington Press, [2019]Description: 1 online resource (xii, 229 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 0295746017
  • 9780295746012
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Way of the barbarians.DDC classification:
  • 305.800951/09021 23
LOC classification:
  • DS730 .Y428 2019
Online resources:
Contents:
Han Yu, the Annals, and the origins of ethnicized orthodoxy -- Han Yu, Liu Zongyuan, and the debate over Buddhism and barbarism -- Ethnocentric moralism in two Late Tang essays -- Ethnicized orthodoxy in the Northern Song guwen revival -- Ideas of barbarization in eleventh-century Annals exegesis -- Chineseness and barbarism in early Daoxue philosophy.
Summary: "The Way of the Barbarians examines a critical period in the development of conceptions of Chinese identity and of foreignness. After tracing thought about culture, customs, ritual, and ethnicity to BCE classical texts, Shao-yun Yang focuses on the meaning and boundaries of Chineseness during the Tang (618-907 CE) and Song (960-1276 CE) dynasties. This period is widely seen as a watershed during which Chinese society was transformed in fundamental ways by population growth, commercialization, urbanization, technological advances, the decline of the long-dominant 'great clan' elite, and the rise of a new literati elite via the greatly expanded civil service examination system. Accompanying shifts occurred in how the Chinese defined themselves as a people and understood their relationship to the rest of the world. Previous scholarship has postulated a ninth-century shift from a spirit of cosmopolitanism--which identified foreign peoples as 'barbarians' who were morally and culturally inferior but who could become Chinese through a 'civilizing' process of acculturation--to one of ostracism. Another view identifies a twelfth-century shift from a traditional notion of culturalism to a new Chinese nationalism, which considered foreigners to be immutably and dangerously 'other' and called for their exclusion from the Chinese world, by force if necessary. This carefully argued intellectual history challenges previous thinking regarding the balance between culture, nation, and race in premodern Chinese identity and engages with ongoing debates over the applicability and relevance of the concept of ethnicity to premodern China"-- Provided by publisher.
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"The Way of the Barbarians examines a critical period in the development of conceptions of Chinese identity and of foreignness. After tracing thought about culture, customs, ritual, and ethnicity to BCE classical texts, Shao-yun Yang focuses on the meaning and boundaries of Chineseness during the Tang (618-907 CE) and Song (960-1276 CE) dynasties. This period is widely seen as a watershed during which Chinese society was transformed in fundamental ways by population growth, commercialization, urbanization, technological advances, the decline of the long-dominant 'great clan' elite, and the rise of a new literati elite via the greatly expanded civil service examination system. Accompanying shifts occurred in how the Chinese defined themselves as a people and understood their relationship to the rest of the world. Previous scholarship has postulated a ninth-century shift from a spirit of cosmopolitanism--which identified foreign peoples as 'barbarians' who were morally and culturally inferior but who could become Chinese through a 'civilizing' process of acculturation--to one of ostracism. Another view identifies a twelfth-century shift from a traditional notion of culturalism to a new Chinese nationalism, which considered foreigners to be immutably and dangerously 'other' and called for their exclusion from the Chinese world, by force if necessary. This carefully argued intellectual history challenges previous thinking regarding the balance between culture, nation, and race in premodern Chinese identity and engages with ongoing debates over the applicability and relevance of the concept of ethnicity to premodern China"-- Provided by publisher.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Han Yu, the Annals, and the origins of ethnicized orthodoxy -- Han Yu, Liu Zongyuan, and the debate over Buddhism and barbarism -- Ethnocentric moralism in two Late Tang essays -- Ethnicized orthodoxy in the Northern Song guwen revival -- Ideas of barbarization in eleventh-century Annals exegesis -- Chineseness and barbarism in early Daoxue philosophy.

Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on November 20, 2019).

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