江勇振 (Yung-chen Chiang)
颱灣師範大學歷史係畢業,美國哈佛大學博士。美國印第安那州私立德堡(DePauw)大學歷史係教授。
In this book Yung-chen Chiang tells the story of the origins, hopes, visions and achievements of the social sciences movement in China during the first half of the twentieth century. He focuses on the efforts of social scientists at three institutions - the Yanjing Sociology Department, Nankai Institute of Economics, and Chen Hansheng's Marxist agrarian research enterprise - to relate their disciplines to the needs of Chinese society. As all three groups received funding from the Rockefeller Foundation, their stories offer a unique window on to Sino-American interactions, revealing how the social sciences became a lingua franca of the cultural frontier. Drawing on an impressive variety of archival materials used here for the first time, this study corrects and enriches current scholarship, presenting both a more detailed and panoramic view. Chiang's analysis engages the complex and broader issues of the transfer, indigenization and international patronage of social science disciplines.
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Interesting about the Rockefeller and Chen Hansheng. But it's hard to understand what Chiang really means by "modernization" and "social engineering", the key concepts, by Chinese social scientists' own terms. Also too many details.
评分4.5
评分Too elementary
评分燕京大學、南開經濟研究所、上海大學與瞿鞦白、馬剋思主義學者陳翰笙
评分4.5
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