2014年12月16日火曜日

ジョナサン・スペンス







Jonathan D. Spence (simplified Chinese: 史景迁; traditional Chinese: 史景遷; pinyin: Shǐ Jǐngqiān; born 11 August 1936) is a British-born historian and public intellectual specialising in Chinese history. He was Sterling Professor of History at Yale University from 1993 to 2008. His most widely read book is The Search for Modern China, a survey of the last several hundred years of Chinese history based on his popular course at Yale. A prolific author, reviewer, and essayist, he has published more than a dozen books on China. He retired from Yale in 2008.
Spence's major interest is modern China, especially the Qing Dynasty, and relations between China and the West.[4] Spence frequently uses biographies to examine cultural and political history. Another common theme is the efforts of both Westerners and Chinese "to change China,"[5] and how such efforts were frustrated.[4]

Spence was educated at Winchester College, an English independent school for boys, and at Clare College at the University of Cambridge. He received his BA in history from Cambridge in 1959. He went to Yale on a Clare-Mellon Fellowship to study the history and culture of China, receiving an MA and then a PhD in 1965, when he won the John Addison Porter Prize. As part of his graduate training, he spent a year in Australia to study under Fang Chao-ying and Tu Lien-che, pre-eminent scholars of the Qing dynasty.[6]




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匿名 さんのコメント...

Sir John Boyd, KCMG
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:caxTVuJsb3sJ:www.clare.cam.ac.uk/emeritus-honorary-and-foundation-fellows/+&cd=1&hl=ja&ct=clnk&gl=jp