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Loading... The Great Empires of Asiaby Jim Masselos
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Here is a rare find: a book that makes me wish I were once again an undergraduate. Issued in partnership with Thames & Hudson of London, Jim Masselos's The Great Empires of Asia is a gorgeous book – an oversize hardback with over two hundred mostly full-color images – sturdily bound and printed on thick, glossy paper. When coupled with additional readings (some of which could be conveniently culled from the "Further Reading" section in the back matter), the volume would make a lovely textbook for an upper-level undergraduate seminar on the empires of Asia. The volume includes seven chapters that could be used in their entirety or, as interest and the desire for depth allow, selectively. Contributors are an international cast from Australia, Europe, and North America. . . . The editor and many of the contributors are specialists in visual culture, art history, or architecture, a fact that perhaps helps to explain the visual appeal of the work.
From the beginning of the modern era in 1500 CE, Western history has placed Europe at the center of worldwide political, economic, and cultural dynamism. But long before the European powers began to encroach upon the East, Asia itself was the locus of dozens of empires--some, like the Mongols, legendary. In this gorgeously illustrated, accessibly written volume, experts of art and history analyze the Asian imperial enterprise with an emphasis on the cultural and creative. In seven compelling chapters, plus an informative introduction and conclusion, these essays provide a decisive corrective to old myths about European dominance relative to Asia and show instead the polycentric nature of world power during the past five hundred years. Reaching across a vast swath of the continent, the book brings to life a thousand years of history, from the Khmer empire in Southeast Asia in the early ninth century to the end of Japan's Meiji Period in 1945. It shows how Asian kingdoms dominated global political geography and challenged the states of Europe rather than the reverse, and it provides fascinating insights into the characters, events, and influences that shaped them. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)950History & geography History of Asia History of AsiaLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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