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Journal ArticleDOI

The search for modern China

Peter Lowe
- 01 Jul 1991 - 
- Vol. 67, Iss: 3, pp 630-630
TLDR
The authors explored the history of early-modern and modern China, from the seventeenth century to the present, examining the rise and fall of China's last empire, the emergence of a modern nation-state, the sources and development of revolution, and the implications of complex social, political, cultural, and economic transformations in the People's Republic of China.
Abstract
This course explores the history of early-modern and modern China, from the seventeenth century to the present. We will examine the rise and fall of China’s last empire, the emergence of a modern nation-state, the sources and development of revolution, and the implications of complex social, political, cultural, and economic transformations in the People’s Republic of China. Course materials include scholarly monographs, a memoir, primary sources, and visual and material artifacts that offer diverse perspectives. We will meet twice a week for a combination of lectures, discussion, and viewing of visual texts.

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Dissertation

Romantic Relationships and Urban Modernity in the Writings of Han Bangqing and Zhang Ailing

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a series of illustrative images: http://www.bloomberg.edu.edu/gallery/images/gallery.cfcfcfm
Journal ArticleDOI

Work Ethics and Work Valuations in a Period of Commercialization: Ming China, 1500–1644

TL;DR: This article explored Confucian tenets that made a distinction between mental and physical work, and between four main occupational groups during the Ming period, and found direct and indirect evidence of the commodification of work in cities and in the countryside, and of gendered division of labour.

Wei Yuan and the Chinese Totalistic Iconoclasm: The Demise of Confucianism in Matter and in Form

TL;DR: This article explored the historical origins of the "totalistic iconoclasm" characteristic of Chinese intellectual history in the twentieth century, arguing that the conceptual connection between the civilization of the majority Han ethnicity (the Chinese tradition) and the idea of a political entity of China had already broken down by mid-nineteenth century.
ReportDOI

Cross-cultural Training of Chinese Managers and Workers by U.S. Companies: A Comparative Cultural Analysis of the Problems Reported by U.S. Trainers

Linda Vick
TL;DR: Vick et al. as discussed by the authors proposed a cross-cultural training of Chinese managers and workers by U.S. Trainers, which was accepted for inclusion in Dissertations and Theses by an authorized administrator of PDXScholar.
References
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Posted Content

On the Road: Access to Transportation Infrastructure and Economic Growth in China

TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of access to transportation networks on regional economic outcomes in China over a twenty-period of rapid income growth was investigated, and it was shown that proximity to a transportation network has a moderate positive causal effect on per capita GDP levels across sectors, but no effect on overall GDP growth.
Journal ArticleDOI

Primitive accumulation, accumulation by dispossession, accumulation by ‘extra-economic’ means

TL;DR: The authors review recent uses and transformations of the primitive accumulation that focus on its persistence within the Global North, addressing especially the political implications that attend different readings of primitive accumulation in the era of neoliberal globalization.
Journal ArticleDOI

International Migration as a Tool in Development Policy: A Passing Phase?

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine the recent rise of migration and development as a major area of policy concern and cautions against essentializing migration and placing too great a responsibility upon migrant agency at the expense of the institutional change necessary to bring about development.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Intellectual Origins of Modern Economic Growth

TL;DR: The intellectual origins of the Industrial Revolution are traced back to the Baconian program of the seventeenth century, which aimed at expanding the set of useful knowledge and applying natural philosophy to solve technological problems and bring about economic growth as mentioned in this paper.