HARVARD EAST ASIAN MONOGRAPHS
Cover: Speaking of Yangzhou in HARDCOVER

Harvard East Asian Monographs 236

Speaking of Yangzhou

A Chinese City, 1550-1850

Currently unavailable

Book Details

HARDCOVER

$49.50 • £36.95 • €44.60

ISBN 9780674013926

Publication: September 2004

Short

480 pages

6 x 9 inches

28 halftones, 8 maps, 14 tables

Harvard University Asia Center > Harvard East Asian Monographs

World, subsidiary rights restricted

Related Subjects

Share This

    The early-twentieth-century essayist Zhu Ziqing once wrote that he had only to mention the name of his hometown of Yangzhou to someone in Beijing and the person would respond, "A fine place! A fine place!" Yangzhou was indeed one of the great cities of late imperial China, and its name carries rich historical and cultural resonances. Even today Yangzhou continues to evoke images of artists, men of letters, great merchant families, scenic waterways, an urban environment of considerable grace and charm, and a history imbued with color and romance.

    This book is in some ways a biography of a city that acquired a personality, even a gender, and became an actor in its own history. Yangzhou invites attention because its place in China’s cultural iconography tells us not only of one city’s vicissitudes and fortunes but also of changes in the geography of the Chinese imagination. The author examines the city’s place in the history of the late imperial era and of the meanings that accrued to Yangzhou over time. She argues that the actual construction of the city--its academies of learning, its philanthropic institutions, its gardens, its teahouses, and its brothels--underpinned the construction of a certain idea of Yangzhou.

    Awards

    • 2006 Joseph Levenson Book Prize, Pre-1900 Category, China and Inner Asia Council of the Association for Asian Studies
    Celebrating 100 Years of Excellence in Publishing: Harvard University Press Centennial, 1913-2013 [Picture of birthday cake]