Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 206
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
979-8-8818-0104-5 • Hardback • September 2024 • $110.00 • (£85.00)
979-8-8818-0105-2 • Paperback • September 2024 • $35.00 • (£30.00)
979-8-8818-0106-9 • eBook • September 2024 • $29.00 • (£19.99)
For the past half-century D. E. Mungello has been a leading scholar in Sino-Western history. From 1979 to 2016 he founded and edited a journal dedicated to the post-Mao Zedong era revival of contacts between Chinese and foreign historians. His books include Leibniz and Confucianism, Curious Land , The Great Encounter of China and the West, 1500-1800, The Spirit and the Flesh in Shandong, 1650-1785, Drowning Girls in China: Female Infanticide since 1650, Western Queers in China: Flight to the Land of Oz, The Catholic Invasion of China, This Suffering is my Joy: The Underground Church in Eighteenth-Century China and Interracial Lovers in Revolutionary China. He is the Professor of History Emeritus at Baylor University.
Chapter 1: Historical Overview
Chapter 2: Chinese Acceptance of Western Culture and Christianity
Chapter 3: Chinese Rejection of Western Culture and Christianity
Chapter 4: European Acceptance of Chinese Culture and Confucianism
Chapter 5: European Rejection of Chinese Culture and Confucianism
Conclusion
I’ve been using Mungello’s Great Encounter of China and the West in my global History survey course for many years. I can’t think of another text that so clearly encompasses so many of the processes of globalization in the early modern world. Better still, it flips the traditional narrative away from a Eurocentric world view and never fails to generate substantive discussions. I always tell colleagues that if they are looking for one supplemental text to use in their World Civ classes, this is the one to pick – students will read it, will recognize transnational phenomenon, will use it as a springboard for class discussions, and will find their interest in world history reinvigorated.
— Kenneth J. Orosz, Professor of History, Buffalo State University
Mungello's book ably explores the seismic shifts of the sixteenth and seventeenth century from the perspective of religion and culture in China and Europe. My students are drawn in by the way Jesuit missionaries shape and adapt Christianity to Chinese culture. The greatest strength of the book is Mungello's ability to dispassionately see cultural engagements and cultural clashes from the perspective of both sides, and in the process question Euro-centrism in favor of a more multipolar worldview. I would recommend instructors of world history consider this text, as Mungello highlights in dense but clear language and specific detail how China and the west first sized each other up on the world stage, and how individuals within both cultures were able to step outside their own ethnocentrism to appreciate, and even defend, the practices of a foreign culture.
— Michael McCarty, Professor of History, Salisbury University
Text covers the complexities of class, culture, and religion, both within China and among the Westerners vying for trade, influence, and souls there.
Clearly written in an engaging style that makes a complex subject easily understandable.
Chinese characters have been added for important names, terms, and titles.