Monday, November 7, 2016

Chapter 8

China and the World:

Together Again: The Reemergence of a Unified China

  • Collapse of Han Dynasty
  • Incursion of northern nomads - dressed, married, learned
  • Greater acceptance of Daoism and Buddhism
  • Environmental transformations
  • Liu Zongyuan
  • China regaining their unity under the Sui Dynasty
  • Canal system - linked northern and southern china economically
  • Golden age
  • Arts, Literature, Landscape painting, Ceramics
  • Tang and Song dynasty - six major ministries
  • Personnel, finance, rites, army, justice, and public works
  • Males and females separate in domain life
  • Steppe nomads - less restricted
  • Women showed as weak
  • Breaking bones - foot binding
China and the Northern Nomads: A Chinese World Order in the Making
  • Sharp contrast to rude cultures and artistic achievements
  • Tribute system
  • Gifts granted
  • Favorable exchanges
  • Cultural influence across an ecological frontier
  • Peaceful trade, military conflict, political negotiation, economic extortion
Coping with China: Comparing Korea, Vietnam, and Japan
  • Korea and China
  • Vietnam and China
  • Japan and China - most discussed
China and the Eurasian World Economy
  • Third-wave era
  • Paper making
  • Handwritten calligraphy 
  • Technology was transferred
  • China being economic beneficiary
China and Buddhism
  • Adoption of Marxism
  • Making buddhism chinese
  • Individual salvation and enlightenment
  • Losing state support
  • Purity
  • Confiscating lands, money, metals

Tuesday, November 1, 2016

Chapter 9 and 10

Chapter 9

The Birth of New Religion

  • Nomadic Arabs (Bedouins)
  • Lived in independent clans and tribes
  • Valued bravery, group loyalty, hospitality
  • Praised gods, ancestors, and nature spirits
  • Muhammad - trader that traveled, overwhelming religious experience
  • Islam community rapidly extended its reach throughout Arabia
  • Growing numbers of people converting
  • Arabian Peninsula
The Making of an Arab Empire
  • Arabs migrating beyond their homelands
  • Divided by differences of culture, class, politics, gender, and religious understanding
  • Spreading to Spain and India
  • Believers' movement
  • Social conversion - movement from one religiously defined social community to another
  • Not an easy process
  • Persia - 80% made the transition to a muslim religious identity
  • Companions of prophet - first four caliphs
  • Controversial question about the relationship between men and women
  • "Men have authority of women"
  • Negative views on women
Islam and Cultural Encounter: A Four-Way Comparison
  • The case of India
  • The case of Anatolia
  • The case of West Africa
  • The case of Spain
The World of Islam as a New Civilization
  • Abbasid Dynasty declined
  • Ulama - International elite
  • External threats and internal conflicts towards Islamic Community
  • Exchange of goods, technology, food products, and ideas
  • Ecological change
  • House of Wisdom
Chapter 10

Christian Contraction in Asia and Africa
  • Asian Christianity
  • African Christianity
Byzantine Christendom: Building on the Roman Past
  • Contraction of Christian faith and societies
  • No clear starting point
  • Housing Egypt, Greece, Syria, and Anatolia
  • Political authority remained tight
  • Eastern Orthodox Christianity having a pervasive influence
  • Military known as Greek Fire
  • Religion reflected the region's cultural diversity
Western Christendom: Rebuilding in the Wake of Roman Collapse
  • Reciprocal ties between superior and subordinate
  • The birth of christianity in leaders - Buddha
  • High Middle Ages
  • Holy Roman Empire - Germans
  • Economic and Technological changes in China - Silk Production
  • Religious opportunities for women - operating outside of monastic life
  • Expansion in European Civilization
The West in Comparative Perspective
  • Politics
  • Reason and Faith - emerging