Animals through Chinese History: Earliest Times to 1911

Animals through Chinese History: Earliest Times to 1911

by Dagmar Schäfer (Editor), Dagmar Schäfer (Editor), Martina Siebert (Editor), Roel Sterckx (Editor)

Synopsis

This volume opens a door into the rich history of animals in China. As environmental historians turn their attention to expanded chronologies of natural change, something new can be said about human history through animals and about the globally diverse cultural and historical dynamics that have led to perceptions of animals as wild or cultures as civilized. This innovative collection of essays spanning Chinese history reveals how relations between past and present, lived and literary reality, have been central to how information about animals and the natural world has been processed and evaluated in China. Drawing on an extensive array of primary sources, ranging from ritual texts to poetry to veterinary science, this volume explores developments in the human-animal relationship through Chinese history and the ways in which the Chinese have thought about the world with and through animals. This title is also available as Open Access.

$126.35

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 290
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 13 Dec 2018

ISBN 10: 1108428150
ISBN 13: 9781108428156

Media Reviews
Advance praise: 'This thoughtfully edited collection offers rich and varied work by an interdisciplinary community of scholars thinking with and about animals over the longue duree of Chinese history. The volume demonstrates the value of ranging broadly across region, time period, and source, and readers will find exciting new work on animals in agronomy, ritual practices, consumption of all sorts, literature, ethics, material culture, and much more.' Carla Nappi, University of British Columbia
Advance praise: 'This thought-provoking collection represents both the cutting edge of animal studies and a necessary foundation for future scholarship. It reveals the profound material and symbolic influence of animals on state and society, and offers fresh insights into the impacts of four thousand years of human activity on zoological China.' Sigrid Schmalzer, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Advance praise: 'Animals through Chinese History is a major contribution to Chinese, as well as animal studies. Bringing together leading experts, it explores the changing attitudes towards given species, and the animal world at large, across Chinese history. This rich volume is a must read for anyone interested in Chinese conceptions of nature no less than the global history of the human interaction with non-human animals.' Meir Shahar, Tel Aviv University
Author Bio
Dagmar Schafer is Director of Department III, 'Artefacts, Action and Knowledge', of the Max-Planck-Institut fur Wissenschaftsgeschichte, Berlin. She has published widely on materiality, the processes and structures that lead to varying knowledge systems, and the changing role of artefacts - texts, objects and spaces - in the creation, diffusion and use of scientific and technological knowledge. Martina Siebert works as area specialist for China at the Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin and as an independent scholar. She has written on the role of nature studies in the Chinese world of learning, the classification of animals and the construction of technological pasts. Roel Sterckx is Joseph Needham Professor of Chinese History, Science, and Civilization at the University of Cambridge and Fellow of Clare College. He is the author of Food, Sacrifice and Sagehood in Early China (Cambridge, 2011) and other studies on the cultural history of pre-imperial and early imperial China.