04290nam 22007215 450 991104916190332120260102120452.03-032-02378-510.1007/978-3-032-02378-0(CKB)44770129600041(MiAaPQ)EBC32471114(Au-PeEL)EBL32471114(DE-He213)978-3-032-02378-0(EXLCZ)994477012960004120260102d2025 u| 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierBiographical Traditions in Early Modern East Asia, 1500-1900 Collecting Accounts /edited by Ihor Pidhainy, Ann Waltner1st ed. 2025.Cham :Springer Nature Switzerland :Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,2025.1 online resource (194 pages)History Series3-032-02377-7 1. Ann Waltner; Introduction to Biography in East Asia in the Early Modern Period -- 2. Ihor Pidhainy; Finding Family through Chinese Biography: The Yangs of Xindu, Sichuan -- 3. Jolan Yi; Theory of Writing Biographies of Women in Eighteenth-Century China: A Case Study of Zhang Xue-cheng (1738-1801) -- 4. Mark McNally; The Meiji-Qing Dispute Over Okinawa: Irredentism and the Ideological Potency of Royal Biography, 1872-1880 -- 5. George Dutton; Pham Dinh Ho (1768-1839) and the Vietnamese Biographical Tradition -- 6. Sungoh Yoon; Countering Qing Intervention with the Legacy of Ming Emperor Hongwu: How Ming Loyalists Remained as Ideal Subjects in Nineteenth-Century Chosŏn Korea.“These chapters cover a wide range of analysis and interpretation, yet they are solidly written and very accessible for readers. Biographical writing has been central to the historiographic traditions of the Confucian cultures of East Asia for more than two thousand years. This book makes important contributions to this growing field and will be a most welcome addition to the body of scholarly literature.” -Kenneth Hammond, Professor of History, New Mexico State University, USA This edited collection is composed of four uniquely authored chapters, each of which examines collective identity in early modern East Asia through biography and historical accounts. In addition, an introductory chapter lays out the overall principles and concerns of biography in Early Modern East Asia. The book covers five civilizations (China, Japan, Ryūkyū Kingdom, and Vietnam) while also touching on relations among these civilizations. This volume considers how biographies or life stories can help us better understand these civilizations. Each contributor explores shared concerns about biography, writing, group and individual identity, and the implications of these on the overall genre of biography in East Asia in the early modern period. Ihor Pidhainy is a Lecturer in the Department of History and Geography at Georgia Gwinnett College, USA. Ann Waltner is Professor in the Department of History at the University of Minnesota, USA.History SeriesSoutheast AsiaHistoryChinaHistoryJapanHistoryKoreaHistoryLiteratureHistory and criticismOriental literatureHistory of Southeast AsiaHistory of ChinaHistory of JapanHistory of KoreaLiterary HistoryAsian LiteratureSoutheast AsiaHistory.ChinaHistory.JapanHistory.KoreaHistory.LiteratureHistory and criticism.Oriental literature.History of Southeast Asia.History of China.History of Japan.History of Korea.Literary History.Asian Literature.808.06692Pidhainy Ihor1848179Pidhainy1885279MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9911049161903321Biographical Traditions in Early Modern East Asia, 1500-19004520432UNINA