Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review

"A useful glossary of names, places, and botanical terms in Chinese and English, along with the detailed index, make this work valuable for researchers but the story is accessible to general readers. This book will fascinate anyone interested in botany and the geopolitical dimensions of modern science."

* Choice *

"This is a well-researched and well-written study of an important part of the history of botany, and of the resourcefulness and determination of Chinese botanists. It belongs in botanical and horticultural libraries everywhere, and as a story, it is recommended to anyone with an interest in plants and how they are studied."

* The Council on Botanical and Horticultural Libraries *

"An indispensable addition to our still rather limited knowledge of scientific development in late Imperial and Republican China. Books such as this one are instrumental in putting together the complicated and at times complexing puzzle of the emergence and development of modern scientific practice in China, a process, which has consequences up to the present day."

* Social History of Medicine *

"Ordering the Myriad Things sets out to show how two knowledge systems—one that preoccupied itself by trying to understand how processes of change generated and manifested themselves through things such grasses, trees, and grains and another that sought understanding by making encountered objects the object of study themselves—interacted and ultimately became intertwined."

* Journal of Chinese History *

"Menzies presents a process-focused chronicle of how one newly emergent scientific discipline—botany—was introduced to China and developed by successive generations of Chinese botanists...Excellent, engaging, and well-written."

* H-Net Reviews *

"In this scrupulously researched monograph, Nicholas K. Menzies narrates personal, institutional, and scientific stories in astonishing and vivid detail to create a sweeping narrative of the establishment of the modern science of botany in China."

* Isis, a Journal of the History of Science Society *

"A fascinating and well-researched inquiry into the development of modern Chinese botany."

* Monumenta Serica *

"[A] welcome presentation of the history of modern botany in China. . . . The thought-provoking questions raised by Menzies and his analytical approach are sure to make this book instructive reading for historians of natural history."

* Archives of Natural History *

Ordering the Myriad Things From Traditional

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    £33.98

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    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Sat 4 Jul 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Nicholas K. Menzies, K. Sivaramakrishnan, K. Sivaramakrishnan

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Ordering the Myriad Things From Traditional by Nicholas K. Menzies

      Publisher: University of Washington Press
      Publication Date: 24/11/2021
      ISBN13: 9780295749464, 978-0295749464
      ISBN10: 0295749466

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review

      "A useful glossary of names, places, and botanical terms in Chinese and English, along with the detailed index, make this work valuable for researchers but the story is accessible to general readers. This book will fascinate anyone interested in botany and the geopolitical dimensions of modern science."

      * Choice *

      "This is a well-researched and well-written study of an important part of the history of botany, and of the resourcefulness and determination of Chinese botanists. It belongs in botanical and horticultural libraries everywhere, and as a story, it is recommended to anyone with an interest in plants and how they are studied."

      * The Council on Botanical and Horticultural Libraries *

      "An indispensable addition to our still rather limited knowledge of scientific development in late Imperial and Republican China. Books such as this one are instrumental in putting together the complicated and at times complexing puzzle of the emergence and development of modern scientific practice in China, a process, which has consequences up to the present day."

      * Social History of Medicine *

      "Ordering the Myriad Things sets out to show how two knowledge systems—one that preoccupied itself by trying to understand how processes of change generated and manifested themselves through things such grasses, trees, and grains and another that sought understanding by making encountered objects the object of study themselves—interacted and ultimately became intertwined."

      * Journal of Chinese History *

      "Menzies presents a process-focused chronicle of how one newly emergent scientific discipline—botany—was introduced to China and developed by successive generations of Chinese botanists...Excellent, engaging, and well-written."

      * H-Net Reviews *

      "In this scrupulously researched monograph, Nicholas K. Menzies narrates personal, institutional, and scientific stories in astonishing and vivid detail to create a sweeping narrative of the establishment of the modern science of botany in China."

      * Isis, a Journal of the History of Science Society *

      "A fascinating and well-researched inquiry into the development of modern Chinese botany."

      * Monumenta Serica *

      "[A] welcome presentation of the history of modern botany in China. . . . The thought-provoking questions raised by Menzies and his analytical approach are sure to make this book instructive reading for historians of natural history."

      * Archives of Natural History *

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