Description
Brings a borderlands perspective to the history of China
From the eighth to thirteenth centuries along China's rugged southern periphery, trade in tribute articles and an interregional horse market thrived. These ties dramatically affected imperial China's relations with the emerging kingdoms in its borderlands. Local chiefs before the tenth century had considered the control of such contacts an important aspect of their political authority. Rulers and high officials at the Chinese court valued commerce in the region, where rare commodities could be obtained and vassal kingdoms showed less belligerence than did northern ones. Trade routes along this Southwest Silk Road traverse the homelands of numerous non-Han peoples.
This book investigates the principalities, chiefdoms, and market nodes that emerged and flourished in the network of routes that passed through what James A. Anderson calls the "Dong world," a collection of Tai-speaking polities in upland valleys. The process of state formation that arose through trade coincided with the differentiation of peoples who were later labeled as distinct ethnicities. Exploration of this formative period at the nexus of the Chinese empire, the Dali kingdom, and the Vietnamese kingdom reveals a nuanced picture of the Chinese province of Yunnan and its southern neighbors preceding Mongol efforts to impose a new administrative order in the region. These communities shared a regional identity and a lively history of interaction well before northern occupiers classified its inhabitants as "national minorities" of China.
Brings a borderlands perspective to the history of China
About the Author
James A. Anderson is associate professor of history at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro and author of The Rebel Den of Nung Tri Cao: Loyalty and Identity along the Sino-Vietnamese Frontier.
Reviews
"Adroitly crisscrossing different scales, temporalities, and intellectual fields, The Camphor Tree and the Elephant is an exemplary piece of interdisciplinary scholarship...Expansive in scope, generous yet incisive in execution, it is a book that scholar and actvists interested in the intersection of Indigenous religions, environment, economy, and colonialism can read with great profit."
* Indigenous Religious Traditions *Book Information
ISBN 9780295752778
Author James A. Anderson
Format Hardback
Page Count 298
Imprint University of Washington Press
Publisher University of Washington Press
Weight(grams) 611g