Knowing China
, by Chow, Gregory C.Note: Supplemental materials are not guaranteed with Rental or Used book purchases.
- ISBN: 9789812386793 | 9812386793
- Cover: Paperback
- Copyright: 2/13/2004
About the author | |
Preface | |
List of figures | |
Some facets of China's history | p. 1 |
Shang, 1766-1121 BC - advanced culture and rich human resources | p. 1 |
Zhou, 1122-211 BC - golden period of development of Chinese thoughts | p. 3 |
Qin, 200 BC - national unification and strong government | p. 4 |
Han, 206 BC-220 AD - large empire and adoption of Confucianism ; a great historian | p. 5 |
Three kingdoms, 220-80; Jin, 265-420; and succession of dynasties, 304-589 | p. 9 |
Tang, 618-901 - trade, Buddhism and poetry | p. 10 |
Song, 960-1126 - a flourishing capitalist economy | p. 11 |
Yuan, 1279-1368 - rule by Mongols but Han culture survived | p. 12 |
Ming, 1368-1644 - overseas explorations | p. 13 |
Qing, 1644-1911 - impact of Western and Japanese imperialism | p. 14 |
The republic of China, 1911 - political disunity, wars and economic progress | p. 16 |
The People's Republic of China, 1949-present - from a planned to a market economy | p. 22 |
Two disastrous political movements | p. 23 |
Economic reform initiated in 1978 | p. 26 |
Culture and daily life | p. 31 |
Food and cooking | p. 32 |
Calligraphy and painting | p. 33 |
Handicraft, furniture, China, and other forms of art | p. 37 |
Architecture - buildings and gardens | p. 38 |
Martial arts and performing arts | p. 39 |
Chinese medicine and ways of healing | p. 42 |
Literature | p. 43 |
Philosophy | p. 45 |
Confucian philosophy and daily life | p. 47 |
Individual conduct | p. 47 |
Family relationship | p. 48 |
Social order | p. 49 |
Concluding remarks | p. 50 |
The economy | p. 53 |
China's economy before 1949 | p. 53 |
Chinese economy at present | p. 55 |
Size of the economy | p. 57 |
Accuracy of Chinese official statistics | p. 59 |
Fundamental factors of China's economic growth | p. 63 |
High quality and abundance of human capital | p. 64 |
Market institutions | p. 65 |
Availability of modern technology to a latecomer | p. 66 |
Income inequality | p. 67 |
Strength and weaknesses of China's economic institutions | p. 70 |
The banking system | p. 71 |
The state enterprises | p. 73 |
Moral basis of China's legal system | p. 75 |
Social network - Guanxi | p. 77 |
Respect for patents and intellectual property rights | p. 78 |
China's legal and economic institutions | p. 79 |
The Chinese people | p. 85 |
Who are the Chinese | p. 85 |
The Chinese in mainland China | p. 85 |
Ethnic diversity and discrimination | p. 87 |
Status of women | p. 88 |
Effect of the cultural revolution on behavior | p. 89 |
Abuse of economic power | p. 92 |
Chinese outside of mainland China | p. 94 |
Overseas Chinese in general | p. 94 |
Chinese in Hong Kong | p. 95 |
Chinese in the United States | p. 100 |
Chinese in Taiwan | p. 103 |
China's population problem | p. 105 |
The Chinese government considers a large population a problem | p. 106 |
How many Chinese are too many | p. 107 |
Can China afford to have more children | p. 109 |
A large population has its advantages | p. 113 |
More people means more power and influence | p. 113 |
Favorable scale effects of a very large population | p. 114 |
Education, science and technology | p. 115 |
Historical background of formal educational institutions | p. 115 |
Education in the People's Republic of China | p. 119 |
Education reform after 1978 | p. 122 |
Quality of university faculties | p. 123 |
Institutional characteristics of China's universities | p. 127 |
Non-government educational institutions | p. 130 |
Family education and self education | p. 132 |
Distinguished features of Chinese students | p. 134 |
Science | p. 135 |
Technology | p. 137 |
Government system and performance | p. 141 |
How is the Chinese government organized | p. 141 |
How good is the Chinese government | p. 146 |
Freedom | p. 147 |
Elections and participation in government administration | p. 152 |
What the government does for the people | p. 155 |
Personal experience working with the Chinese government | p. 161 |
On corruption | p. 169 |
On political reform | p. 173 |
Hong Kong and Shanghai : two modern cities | p. 177 |
Hong Kong | p. 177 |
Shanghai | p. 183 |
A country for tourists | p. 193 |
China's geography - a map of China | p. 193 |
Natural beauty - Guilin, Huangshan, Wuyishan, along the Yangtze | p. 195 |
Historical sites | p. 207 |
US-China relations | p. 217 |
The United States as a world power before and after 9/11, 2001 | p. 217 |
The basis of US-China relations | p. 218 |
US-China relation in the power structure of East Asia | p. 220 |
Possible conflict with China over Taiwan | p. 223 |
China not a threat to the United States | p. 224 |
Economic competition from China | p. 225 |
US-China partnership | p. 227 |
Bibliography | p. 231 |
Index | p. 235 |
Table of Contents provided by Blackwell. All Rights Reserved. |
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