Description
Book SynopsisThis deeply informed and clearly written text provides a comprehensive and comprehensible history of China from prehistory to the present. Now updated to include recent political events and scientific research, the book focuses on the interaction of humans and their environment. Tracing changes in the physical and cultural world that is home to a fifth of humankind, Robert B. Marks illuminates the paradoxes inherent in China's environmental narrative, demonstrating how historically sustainable practices can, in fact, be profoundly ecologically unsound. The author also reevaluates China's traditional heroic storyline, highlighting the marginalization of nature and contacts with other peoples that followed the spread of Chinese civilization while examining the development of a distinctly Chinese way of relating to and altering the environment. Unmatched in his ability to synthesize a complex subject clearly and cogently, Marks has written an accessible yet nuanced history for any student
Table of ContentsList of Illustrations Preface to the Second Edition Acknowledgments Chapter 1: Introduction: Problems and Perspectives Chapter 2: China’s Natural Environment and Early Human Settlement to 1000 BCE Chapter 3: States, Wars, and Farms: Environmental Change in Ancient and Early Imperial China, 1000 BCE–300 CE Chapter 4: Deforesting the North and Colonizing the South in the Middle Imperial Period, 300–1300 CE Chapter 5: Empire and Environment: China’s Borderlands, Islands, and Inner Peripheries in the Late Imperial Period, 1300–1800 CE Chapter 6: Environmental Degradation in Modern China, 1800–1949 Chapter 7: “Controlling” Nature in the People’s Republic of China, 1949–Present Chapter 8: Conclusion: China and Its Environment in World Historical Perspective Select Bibliography Index