Chinese (mainland and Taiwan), European, Japanese, Canadian, and North American scholars address a subject of increasing interest in modern Chinese and world history: the emergence of a modern citizenry. While much attention has focused to date on the rise of the modern Chinese nation, little or none has been directed at the important concomitant element of a politically active "citizenry" and what that might mean in a Chinese context. After a detailed introduction by the editors on this theme in Western and East Asian theory and practice, each essay examines a thinker or group of thinkers from the crucial transition period in modern China, 1890-1920, and assesses their views on how China might forge a modern society with a participatory political citizenry.
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I only read Peter Zarrow, Joan Judge, and Anne Cheng's articles in this volume. The quality of papers vary but it provides a very good picture of the state of the field: Chinese intellectuals and their conception of the citizenship.
评分I only read Peter Zarrow, Joan Judge, and Anne Cheng's articles in this volume. The quality of papers vary but it provides a very good picture of the state of the field: Chinese intellectuals and their conception of the citizenship.
评分與陳宏謀有關
评分I only read Peter Zarrow, Joan Judge, and Anne Cheng's articles in this volume. The quality of papers vary but it provides a very good picture of the state of the field: Chinese intellectuals and their conception of the citizenship.
评分與陳宏謀有關
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