Peter Kees Bol explore les transitions intellectuelles et les pratiques culturelles des élites chinoises, nationales et locales, à travers les siècles. Son érudition examine comment ces élites se sont engagées avec les textes classiques et ont navigué dans des paysages culturels en mutation. Bol combine de manière unique l'enquête historique avec l'analyse géo-spatiale avancée, ouvrant la voie à de nouvelles méthodes pour comprendre le passé profond de la Chine. Son travail offre des aperçus profonds sur l'évolution de la culture et de la société chinoises, dans un contexte géographique et historique sophistiqué.
Things Chinese presents sixty distinctive items that are typical of Chinese
culture and together open a special window onto the people, history, and
society of the world's largest nation. Many of the objects are collectibles,
and each has a story to tell.
The I Ching, or Book of Changes, has been one of the two or three most influential books in the Chinese canon. It has been used by people on all levels of society, both as a method of divination and as a source of essential ideas about the nature of heaven, earth, and humankind. During the eleventh and twelfth centuries, Sung dynasty literati turne
Discover the rarified Peranakan (native-born Chinese of Southeast Asia)
aesthetics that are today highly sought-after for their beauty: distinctive
furniture and ceramics, textiles and jewellery, and many other art objects.
In premodern China, Korea, Japan, and Vietnam, just as in the far less
culturally cohesive countries composing the West of the Middle Ages,
enslavement was an assumed condition of servitude warranting little
examination, as the power and profits it afforded to the slaver made it a
convention pursued unreflectively.
Bridges, the least known and understood of China's many wonders, are one of its most striking and resilient feats of architectural prowess. Chinese Bridges brings together a thorough look at these marvels from one of the world's leading experts on Chinese culture and historical geography, Ronald G. Knapp.While many consider bridges to be merely utilitarian, the bridges of China move beyond that stereotype, as many are undeniably dramatic, even majestic and daring. Chinese Bridges illustrates in detail 20 well-preserved ancient bridges, along with descriptions and essays on the distinctive architectural elements shared by the various designs. For the first time in an English-language book, Chinese Bridges records scores of newly discovered bridges across China's vast landscape, illustrated with over 400 color photographs, as well as woodblock prints, historic images, paintings and line drawings.