The Great Wall of China
From History to Myth
£22.99
Part of Canto original series
- Author: Arthur Waldron, United States Naval War College, Newport, Rhode Island
- Date Published: May 1992
- availability: Available
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9780521427074
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The Great Wall of China is renowned as one of the most impressive and intriguing man-made structures on earth. It is also the subject of an awesome mythology, embedded in both learned and popular imaginations, which has grown up and now obscured the historical record. Even the maps which chart the Wall's position offer erroneous accounts of a phenomenon which has never been accurately surveyed. Arthur Waldron reveals that the notion of an ancient and continuously existing Great Wall, one of modern China's national symbols and a legend in the eyes of the West, is in fact a myth. His fascinating account reveals the strategic and political context for the decision to build walls as fortified defences, and explores its profound implications for nomadic and agricultural life under the Ming dynasty. Taking up the insights offered into more recent Chinese politics, the book concludes with a searching investigation of the Wall's new meanings in the myths - departing from that history - fostered in our own century.
Reviews & endorsements
'Historical writing at its best, a brilliant and very readable account.' The Asia Society
See more reviews'This book has a wisdom, a patience, and a confidence about it that enrich Waldron's wonderful knack for writing history.' History Book Club
'One of the few books that change our basic assumptions about China.' Publisher's Weekly
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×Product details
- Date Published: May 1992
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9780521427074
- length: 316 pages
- dimensions: 219 x 139 x 21 mm
- weight: 0.42kg
- contains: 19 b/w illus. 8 maps
- availability: Available
Table of Contents
List of illustrations
Acknowledgments
Note on romanization
1. Introduction: what is the Great Wall of China?
Part I. First Considerations:
2. Early Chinese walls
3. Strategic origins of Chinese walls
Part II. The Making of the Great Wall:
4. Geography and strategy: the importance of the Ordos
5. Security without walls: early Ming strategy and its collapse
6. Toward a new strategy: the Ordos crisis and the first walls
7. Politics and military policy at the turn of the sixteenth century
8. The second debate over the Ordos
9. The heyday of wall-building
Part III. The Significance of Wall-Building:
10. The Great Wall and foreign policy: the problem of compromise
11. The Wall acquires new meanings
Notes
Bibliography
Chinese and Japanese materials
Western materials
Glossary
Index.
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