Global History, Regional History and National History: Proceedings of the Cooperation Conference between Fudan University, Dongda University and Princeton University (fudan Literature and History Special Issue No. 12)

Global History, Regional History and National History: Proceedings of the Cooperation Conference between Fudan University, Dongda University and Princeton University (fudan Literature and History Special Issue No. 12)

by Fudan University Institute Of Literature And History

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About This Novel

This is a selection of papers from three academic seminars on global history, regional history or national history held by the Institute of Literature and History at Fudan University, the Institute of Oriental Culture at the University of Tokyo, and the Department of East Asia at Princeton University in the three years from 2011 to 2013. The collection of essays includes five themes, the first is "General Introduction: The Relationship between Global History, Regional History and National History" (three articles by Ge Zhaoguang, Elman, Masa Haneda, etc.), The second is "As a Region: What is East Asia and China" (two articles by Dong Shaoxin, Wang Zhenzhong, etc.), And the third is "In the Perspective of Global History and Regional History: Concepts, Philosophy and Literature" (Federico Marcon, Takahiro Nakajima, Yasushi Oki, etc.), The fourth is "Intersection and Correlation: Historical Research of East Asian Countries" (Five articles including Norihisa Baba, Tineke D'Haeseleer, Wang Xinlei, Paize Keulemans, Sheldon Garon, etc.), And the fifth is "Global History Research and University Internationalization: The Current Situation and Reflections of Various Schools" (Gu Yunshen, Jin Sato, etc. Two articles). This collection of essays attempts to present some thoughts of scholars from the three universities on global history, world history, regional history and national history. It not only acknowledges the differences in how historians from each country observe the world, but also strives to find mutually compatible consensus. It also hopes to explore a possible ideal global history\u002F world history in terms of theory, method and form.

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