Setting the context for the upheavals and transformations of contemporary China, this text provides a re-assessment of Max Weber’s celebrated sociology of China. Returning to the sources drawn on by Weber in The Religion of China: Confucianism and Taoism, it offers an informed account of the Chinese institutions discussed and a concise discussion of Weber’s writings on ‘the rise of modern capitalism’. Notably it subjects Weber’s argument to critical scrutiny, arguing that he drew upon sources which infused the central European imagination of the time, constructing a sense of China in Europe, whilst European writers were constructing a particular image of imperial China and its Confucian framework. Re-examining Weber’s discussion of the role...
After, at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century, Chinese intellectuals had quest...
According to Max Weber, Confucianism will be an inhibiting force in Asian economicdevelopment. Confr...
The contradictions of modernisation run through the whole of modern Chinese history. The abundance o...
[Extract] In order to confirm his argument that capitalism necessarily originated in Europe as a res...
Ever since Confucianism rose to the forefront of discussion among sociologists, scholars of religio...
This article examines reception (or the lack of it) of Max Weber in China\u27s legal field from the ...
Max Weber attributes the rise of modern Western society to Puritanism, noting that the Calvinist Pro...
This article reassesses Weber’s position on the influence of Confucianism on China’s failure to deve...
The familiar discussion of the nexus between religion and economy has emblematic representation in M...
In political and sociological debate, China is becoming an interesting field of research among the w...
“In Confucianism: Its Roots and Global Significance, English-language readers get a rare opportunity...
Following the turn of the 20th century, Chinese intellectuals questioned the value of the Confucian ...
It remains highly relevant to analyze international relations with a special emphasis not only on th...
AbstractThanks to the publication of Martin Jacques's When China Rules the World, the notion of Chin...
This course focuses on the impact of the Confucian tradition on Chinese notions of the individual in...
After, at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century, Chinese intellectuals had quest...
According to Max Weber, Confucianism will be an inhibiting force in Asian economicdevelopment. Confr...
The contradictions of modernisation run through the whole of modern Chinese history. The abundance o...
[Extract] In order to confirm his argument that capitalism necessarily originated in Europe as a res...
Ever since Confucianism rose to the forefront of discussion among sociologists, scholars of religio...
This article examines reception (or the lack of it) of Max Weber in China\u27s legal field from the ...
Max Weber attributes the rise of modern Western society to Puritanism, noting that the Calvinist Pro...
This article reassesses Weber’s position on the influence of Confucianism on China’s failure to deve...
The familiar discussion of the nexus between religion and economy has emblematic representation in M...
In political and sociological debate, China is becoming an interesting field of research among the w...
“In Confucianism: Its Roots and Global Significance, English-language readers get a rare opportunity...
Following the turn of the 20th century, Chinese intellectuals questioned the value of the Confucian ...
It remains highly relevant to analyze international relations with a special emphasis not only on th...
AbstractThanks to the publication of Martin Jacques's When China Rules the World, the notion of Chin...
This course focuses on the impact of the Confucian tradition on Chinese notions of the individual in...
After, at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century, Chinese intellectuals had quest...
According to Max Weber, Confucianism will be an inhibiting force in Asian economicdevelopment. Confr...
The contradictions of modernisation run through the whole of modern Chinese history. The abundance o...