Therefore too, if and when thatdefinition shifts ground —— if and when "our place in the world" be-gins to change, it can be the equivalent of an earthquake leaving inits wake the rubble of centuries and, for the survivors, either thepossibility of rebuilding some new combination of places, or migrat-ing to safer ground. Naturally, such earthquakes are not everydayoccurrences and, normally, their impact is only local. They tend tooccur only at moment when, rather like the tectonic forces of theearths plated themselves, two self- definitions come into directconflict and one is forced to give way (space) to the other.
作者簡介
暫缺《從王朝地理到歷史地理》作者簡介
圖書目錄
Preface Acknowledgments Chapter 1 Introduction The Modernization of Historical Geography On the History of Geography: Theoretical Considerations Western Influence and Chinese Inherence Studies on the History of Geography of China The Modern Historical Geography in China: Question The Structure of This Study Chapter 2 Confucian Geography: The Tradition The Setting of Confucian Geography The Harmonious Order of the Land An Official Geography (Geography as Political Power) A Moral and Ritual Geography (Geography as the Demonstration of Humanity) A Transcendental Geography (Geography as a Part of Cosmology) An Historical Geography (Geography as the Identity of Place) Chapter 3Geography in the Qing Dynasty: The Dynastic Geography The Separation of Geography from Cosmology The Evidential Research Movement and Geography The Flourishing of "Yan-Ge 1)i-Li" Chapter 4 The Early Twentieth Century: TheTime of Change The Collapse of the Concept of "Central Kingdom" The Dissemination of Social Darwinism The Veneration of "Mr. Science" The National Studies Movement The Emergence and Limitation of the Modern Geography Chapter 5 Gu Jiegang: The New Dynastic Geography (1) The Power of Geography in Gu Jiegangs Historiography "Gu Di Bian": A Critique of Ancient Geography The Organization of the Yu Gong Society Chapter 6 Yu Gong Society : The New Dynastic Geography (2) The Role of the Yu Gong Society The Achievements of the Journal The Problem of Theory Chapter 7 The Study of Hou Renzhi: Historical Geography The Theoretical Basis for Historical Geography Criticism of Yan-ge Di-li Hous Critiques of Dynastic Geography Hous Concern with the Meaning of Landscape Traditional Values of the Modern Scholar Chapter 8 Conclusion Tradition and Modernity The Contribution of Historical Geography A Remaining Dilemma Bibliography Glossary