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Published October 3, 2021
Valerie Hansen teaches Chinese and world history at Yale, where she is professor of history. She is the author, most recently, of The Year 1000: When Explorers Connected the World and Globalization Began. In the course of writing The Year 1000, she traveled to some twenty different countries and was a visiting scholar at Xiamen University in China, University of Birmingham in the United Kingdom, and the Collège de France in Paris.
Having lived in China for six plus years, Valerie has visited at least 300 temples, climbed the Great Wall multiple times (once during a lightning storm), and posed next to the Terracotta Warriors eleven times. (All this in the company of her husband and three children.)
Her other books include: The Silk Road: A New History, The Open Empire: A History of China to 1800, Negotiating Daily Life in Traditional China, Changing Gods in Medieval China, 1127-1279, and Voyages in World History (co-authored with Kenneth R. Curtis). Recorded April 8, 2021.
Show Notes
02:00 When the future feels especially unpredictable, the study of history can provide guidance
04:20 How to get a job with a PhD in history
05:40 Why is Chinese so difficult?
12:02 How to study Chinese history when your government won't let you go to China
16:29 If you want to study medieval Chinese history you need to speak Japanese
20:47 The true history of China according to the Japanese
22:54 Japan is to Tang China as America is to Tudor England
25:50 Why the dynastic paradigm may not be the most helpful to the historian of China
29:10 Maybe we should stop using the word China altogether
31:50 A language is a dialect with an army
34:48 The many different Chinas
37:57 The Chinese have always been selectively cosmopolitan
44:14 The farther back you go in the past, the less of the role of modern ideology and the more freedom accorded the historian
48:07 On being a non-Chinese historian of China
51:04 Does ancient Chinese history provide a framework for understanding China's great power ambitions today?
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Published October 3, 2021
Valerie Hansen teaches Chinese and world history at Yale, where she is professor of history. She is the author, most recently, of The Year 1000: When Explorers Connected the World and Globalization Began. In the course of writing The Year 1000, she traveled to some twenty different countries and was a visiting scholar at Xiamen University in China, University of Birmingham in the United Kingdom, and the Collège de France in Paris.
Having lived in China for six plus years, Valerie has visited at least 300 temples, climbed the Great Wall multiple times (once during a lightning storm), and posed next to the Terracotta Warriors eleven times. (All this in the company of her husband and three children.)
Her other books include: The Silk Road: A New History, The Open Empire: A History of China to 1800, Negotiating Daily Life in Traditional China, Changing Gods in Medieval China, 1127-1279, and Voyages in World History (co-authored with Kenneth R. Curtis). Recorded April 8, 2021.
Show Notes
02:00 When the future feels especially unpredictable, the study of history can provide guidance
04:20 How to get a job with a PhD in history
05:40 Why is Chinese so difficult?
12:02 How to study Chinese history when your government won't let you go to China
16:29 If you want to study medieval Chinese history you need to speak Japanese
20:47 The true history of China according to the Japanese
22:54 Japan is to Tang China as America is to Tudor England
25:50 Why the dynastic paradigm may not be the most helpful to the historian of China
29:10 Maybe we should stop using the word China altogether
31:50 A language is a dialect with an army
34:48 The many different Chinas
37:57 The Chinese have always been selectively cosmopolitan
44:14 The farther back you go in the past, the less of the role of modern ideology and the more freedom accorded the historian
48:07 On being a non-Chinese historian of China
51:04 Does ancient Chinese history provide a framework for understanding China's great power ambitions today?
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.