The Cambridge History of China, Volume 5, Part Two: Sung China, 960–1279 ed. by John W. Chaffee and Denis Twitchett (review)

IF 0.3 3区 历史学 0 ASIAN STUDIES Journal of Song-Yuan Studies Pub Date : 2018-03-27 DOI:10.1353/sys.2016.0008
Christian de Pee
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Abstract

In 1966, John King Fairbank and Denis Twitchett agreed to become the general editors of a Cambridge History of China. They planned “to provide a substantial account of the history of China as a bench mark for the Western history-reading public: an account of the current state of knowledge in six volumes.”1 By extending the prestigious Cambridge History series to China they intended to demonstrate that “Chinese history belongs to the world, not only as a right and necessity, but also as a subject of compelling interest.”2 Their design for a concise series, however, was soon overwhelmed by “the out-pouring of current research, the application of new methods, and the extension of scholarship into new fields,” forcing them to adjust the projected number of volumes to fourteen in 1976, and to sixteen or eighteen by 1982.3 In his memoir, Chinabound: A Fifty-Year Memoir, Fairbank describes the dilemma raised by the rapid growth of the number and the size of the emerging volumes: “the more massive our history becomes, the fewer its readers may be.”4 The general public could still read the individual articles “for the story they tell,” but the series would also aid professional historians by offering an increased apparatus of notes and bibliographies.5 In his preface to the second, final part of the Cambridge History of the Song dynasty, editor John Chaffee writes that its earliest essays date to the
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《剑桥中国史》,第五卷,第二部分:宋中国,960–1279年
1966年,费尔班克和特威切特同意担任《剑桥中国史》的总编辑。他们计划“提供一份关于中国历史的实质性报告,作为西方历史阅读公众的基准:六卷本的当前知识状况报告。“1通过将享有盛誉的剑桥历史系列扩展到中国,他们打算证明“中国历史属于世界,不仅是一种权利和必要性,而且是一个令人感兴趣的主题。”2然而,他们设计了一个简洁的系列,很快就被“当前研究的大量涌现、新方法的应用以及学术向新领域的扩展”所淹没,迫使他们在1976年将预计的卷数调整为14卷,到1981年调整为16或18卷,费尔班克描述了新兴书籍数量和规模的快速增长所带来的困境:“我们的历史越庞大,读者可能就越少。”4公众仍然可以“根据他们讲述的故事”阅读个别文章,但该系列还将通过提供更多的笔记和参考书目来帮助专业历史学家编辑约翰·查菲在《剑桥宋代史》的第二部分,也是最后一部分的序言中写道,其最早的散文可以追溯到
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