Charles Holcombe begins his extraordinarily ambitious book by asking the question "What is East Asia?" In the modern age, many of the features that made the region - now defined as including China, Japan, and Korea - distinct have been submerged by the effects of revolution, politics, or globalization. Yet, as an ancient civilization, the region had both an historical and cultural coherence. It shared, for example, a Confucian heritage, some common approaches to Buddhism, a writing system that is deeply imbued with ideas and meaning, and many political and institutional traditions. This shared past and the interconnections among three distinct, yet related societies are at the heart of this book, which traces the story of East Asia from the dawn of history to the early twenty-first century. Charles Holcombe is an experienced and sure-footed guide who encapsulates, in a fast-moving and colorful narrative, the vicissitudes and glories of one of the greatest civilizations on earth.
Author(s): Charles Holcombe
Edition: 2
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Year: 2017
Language: English
Pages: 496
What Is East Asia?
1 The Origins of Civilization in East Asia
12
2 The Formative Era
31
3 The Age of Cosmopolitanism
60
4 The Creation of a Community: China, Korea, and Japan (Seventh-Tenth Centuries)
95
5 Mature Independent Trajectories (Tenth-Sixteenth Centuries)
132
6 Early Modern East Asia (Sixteenth-Eighteenth Centuries)
167
7 Dai Viet (Vietnam before the Nineteenth Century)
199
8 The Nineteenth-Century Encounter of Civilizations
217
9 The Age of Westernization (1900-1929)
259
10 The Dark Valley (1930-1945)
288
11 Japan since 1945
311
12 Korea since 1945
330
13 Vietnam since 1945
350
14 China since 1949
359
Afterword
399
Character List
401
Notes
419
Index
447