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El. knyga: Fifteen Lectures On Traditional Chinese Culture

(Eurasian Univ, Usa & Shandong Univ, China)
  • Formatas: 548 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 10-Jan-2022
  • Leidėjas: World Scientific Publishing Co Pte Ltd
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9789811239779
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  • Formatas: 548 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 10-Jan-2022
  • Leidėjas: World Scientific Publishing Co Pte Ltd
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9789811239779
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This book is edited based on a series of lectures on Chinese cultural history delivered at the Peking University in 2004. It stands out with its distinctive methodology and unique stand, and is popular with readers, with 17 reprints for the Chinese edition since 2006. Before the 1980s, traditional culture was often the target of criticisms and put in a negative light in China. After the 1980s, due to the belief that traditional culture can contribute to modernization, people decided to take its essence and discard its dregs. As of today, most books on this theme have been written in accordance with this principle. However, in this book, the author argues that the Western ways of modernization have gone wrong in many respects by now and need to be reflected on and re-examined. Traditional Chinese culture, as it happens, could provide us with a rich source for comparing and reflecting. As such, when we discuss traditional culture nowadays, not only should we excavate its long-hidden meanings, we should also develop contrastive resources in order to facilitate our collaborative development in future. The discussions in this book adopt a vertical structure that begins with how Chinese define a human, followed by topics on the human body, Qi, food, male and female, home and state, the relationship between heaven and human beings, ritual systems, historical consciousness, thinking patterns, the art of expressing sentiments, commitments to the politics of virtues and achievements, and cultural practices. In every chapter, there is also a horizontal method of comparison on Chinese, Western and Indian cultures, in order to foreground the particularities and advantages of the Chinese culture. Apart from elaborating on the major characteristics of traditional Chinese culture, there is also a discussion on how the modern disdain for and misunderstandings of the traditional culture originated from the West. Therefore, the author also elaborates on Montesquieu's views of China and the various misconceptions and misunderstandings of the traditional Chinese legal systems. Finally, it ends with the author's hopes on revitalizing the Chinese civilization.



"This book is edited based on a series of lectures on Chinese cultural history delivered at the Peking University in 2004. It stands out with its distinctive methodology and unique stand, and is popular with readers, with 17 reprints for the Chinese edition since 2006. Before the 1980s, traditional culture was often the target of criticisms and put in a negative light in China. After the 1980s, due to the belief that traditional culture can contribute to modernization, people decided to take its essence and discard its dregs. As of today, most books on this theme have been written in accordance with this principle. However, in this book, the author argues that the Western ways of modernization have gone wrong in many respects by now and need to be reflected on and re-examined. Traditional Chinese culture, as it happens, could provide us with a rich source for comparing and reflecting. As such, when we discuss traditional culture nowadays, not only should we excavate its long-hidden meanings, we should also develop contrastive resources in order to facilitate our collaborative development in future. The discussions in this book adopt a vertical structure that begins with how Chinese define a human, followed by topics on the human body, Qi, food, male and female, home and state, the relationship between heaven and human beings, ritual systems, historical consciousness, thinking patterns, the art of expressing sentiments, commitments to the politics of virtues and achievements, and cultural practices. In every chapter, there is also a horizontal method of comparison on Chinese, Western and Indian cultures, in order to foreground the particularities and advantages of the Chinese culture. Apart from elaborating on the major characteristics of traditional Chinese culture, there is also a discussion on how the modern disdain for and misunderstandings of the traditional culture originated from the West. Therefore, the author also elaborates on Montesquieu's views of China and the various misconceptions and misunderstandings of the traditional Chinese legal systems. Finally, it ends with the author's hopes on revitalizing the Chinese civilization"--
Preface v
About the Author xix
Acknowledgments xxi
Lecture One The Body's Qi: Its Impact on Everything
1(28)
1 No Fetishization of the Body Shape
1(8)
2 No Aestheticization of Human Body
9(5)
3 No Binary Oppositions Between Mentality and Physicality
14(8)
4 Perceptive Experience and Telepathy Through Qi
22(7)
Lecture Two Food: The Emergence of Li and Culture
29(36)
1 The Nature of Ancient Civilization
29(5)
2 A Civilization that Emphasizes Eating and Drinking
34(5)
3 The Tradition of the "Eating and Drinking" Mindset
39(7)
4 Life and Religion in the Civilization of Eating and Drinking
46(9)
5 Politics and Rites in the Civilization of Eating and Drinking
55(10)
Lecture Three Men and Women: Establishment of Moral Relations
65(38)
1 Envisioning the Relations between the Two Sexes
65(4)
2 Surnames, Clan Names, and Ancestor Worship
69(11)
3 Ancestor Gao Mei and God
80(4)
4 Hallmarks of Gender Thinking
84(19)
Lecture Four The System of Enfeoffment: The Establishment of a Home State
103(34)
1 Respecting Humans and Deities
103(8)
2 Institutional Establishment
111(9)
3 Emphasis on Ethical Relationship
120(12)
4 Critical Thought of China and the West
132(5)
Lecture Five Dao and Shu: Internal Saint and External King
137(34)
1 The Feudal Codes of Ethics
137(13)
2 The Wide-ranging Ritual System
150(13)
3 Rituals Originating from the Primordial Unity
163(8)
Lecture Six The Heaven and the Human Beings: Communicating with Gods
171(20)
1 Special Relationships between Gods and Human Beings
171(5)
2 Non-transcendent Ruler of Heaven
176(4)
3 People Not Waiting to Be Redeemed by Commandments
180(4)
4 The Natural and Comfortable Way of Heaven
184(7)
Lecture Seven Royal Officials: A Rational and Ritualistic Society
191(22)
1 The Classical Schools of Chinese Philosophy Originating from Official Academic Learning
191(5)
2 Royal Officials Grounded in a Patriarchal System
196(6)
3 Rationalized Type of Domination
202(5)
4 Official Academic Learning with Social Vicissitude
207(6)
Lecture Eight Historiography: Historiographers and Historical Consciousness
213(28)
1 The History of "Traditional Laws" Handed Down through Generations
213(6)
2 The "History" of Traditional Laws Handed Down through Generations
219(6)
3 The History of Traditional Laws "Handed Down through Generations"
225(10)
4 Historical Thought
235(6)
Lecture Nine On Thinking: Thinking Patterns and Methods
241(26)
1 Patterns of Thinking
241(16)
2 Methods of Thinking
257(10)
Lecture Ten Expressing Sentiments: A World of Qi and Pleasure
267(40)
1 All Creations are Produced by Wind, Qi, Sounds, and Music
267(7)
2 Junzi is Cultivated Through Music and Dancing
274(20)
3 Junzi is Aroused by Poetry, Affected by Sentiments, and Perfected by Music
294(13)
Lecture Eleven Tribulations: Commitment to the Politics of Virtue and Achievements
307(28)
1 World: Empires Commanded by Heaven
307(6)
2 Revolutions: Government Following People's Will
313(5)
3 Country: States Intertwined with Families
318(4)
4 National Governance: State Affairs Different from Family Affairs
322(13)
Lecture Twelve The Duke of Zhou: A Saint King of Cultural Practice
335(30)
1 The Duke of Zhou in the History of Thought
335(5)
2 Mystery of the "Axial Period"
340(4)
3 Creator and Expounder
344(5)
4 Definer of Middle Kingdom
349(6)
5 Enlightener of Propriety, Music, Culture, and Virtue
355(10)
Lecture Thirteen A Distorted Sense of Facial Makeup: Montesquieu's View of China
365(56)
1 Imagine the "Other" Far Off
365(11)
2 Derogate the Morality of the "Other"
376(5)
3 On the Special National Conditions of China
381(6)
4 On the Social Stagnation in Asia
387(4)
5 A New Perception of China
391(4)
6 Pedigree of the Development of Thoughts
395(7)
7 Montesquieu in China
402(12)
8 Discovering History in History
414(7)
Lecture Fourteen Western Understanding of Chinese Culture through Law
421(42)
1 Western Notions of Chinese Law
421(5)
2 Overall Review: The Nature of Chinese Law
426(9)
3 Specific Discussion: The Status Quo of Law Enforcement
435(17)
4 Beyond Bias and Misunderstanding
452(11)
Lecture Fifteen Alienation and Rebirth of Chinese Civilization
463(36)
1 Evolution, Change, and Alienation: The Transformation and Developmental Modes of Civilization
463(13)
2 Culture in Change: The Cultural Condition of Modern China
476(10)
3 Tradition in Flow and Civilization in Rebirth
486(9)
4 Mainland, Taiwan, and Overseas: Globalization and New Trends in Chinese Civilization
495(4)
Postscript 499(4)
Index 503