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HAN CULTURE (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   089363


Nature and nurture on imperial China's frontiers / Perdue, Peter C   Journal Article
Perdue, Peter C Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract Ecologies of production and state classifications shaped Chinese imperial frontier policies. In Chinese classical debates about the effect of environment on human character, the dominant view held that all peoples could become civilised, but a dissenting view held that barbarians could never change their ways. Nomadic pastoralists likewise debated whether to adopt certain Han cultural practices or reject them. Chinese dynasties often accepted diversity, but at certain times tried to eliminate difference by persuasion or by force. Three cases illustrate these processes during the Qing period: the relationship between Manchus and Mongols, Qing policies towards aboriginal peoples and the settlement of Taiwan, and Qing policies towards southwestern mountain peoples. In each case, policies came out of the interaction of ethnic categorization, views on cultural transformation and frontier environments. When Qing rulers lost the ability to recognise such cultural distinctions, they lost a key to the endurance of the empire.
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2
ID:   140164


Short history of the Chinese people / Goodrich, Carrington 1969  Book
Goodrich, Carrington Book
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Edition 3rd ed.
Publication London, George Allen and unwin Ltd, 1969.
Description xiii, 295p.: mapspbk
Standard Number 049510169
Key Words Mongols  Han Culture  Chinese People  Tang Dynasty  China - History 
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
004292951/GOO 004292MainOn ShelfGeneral