Journal of China in Global and Comparative Perspectives
Volume 1, 2015
Volume 1, 2015
编者序
Author: Xiangqun Chang
Volume number: 1
Year of publication: 2015
Language: English
Publisher: Global Century Press (London)
ISSN 2633-9544 (print)
ISSN 2633-9552 (online)
ISBN 978-1-910334-51-5
DOI https://doi.org/10.24103/JCGCP.en.2015.1
作者: 常向群
期号:第1期
出版年份:2015年
语言:英文
出版社:环球世纪出版社 (伦敦)
ISSN 2633-9560 (印刷版)
ISSN 2633-9579 (电子版)
ISBN 978-1-910334-51-5
DOI https://doi.org/10.24103/JCGCP.en.2015.1
Abstract: This editorial introduces the unique characteristics of Journal of China in Global and Comparative Perspectives, the main theme of the launch issue – the creation and development of the vocabularies of the Chinese social sciences – and related points drawn from the contributions.
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Xiangqun Chang (常向群), Professor Xiangqun Chang FRSA, FGCA, President and Founding Fellow of the Global China Academy (GCA), a UK-based independent worldwide fellowship that encourages global and comparative studies on China in the social sciences and humanities; Editor-in-Chief of Global Century Press (GCP) and the Journal of China in Global and Comparative Perspectives (JCGCP); Distinguished Professor at Nankai University and Honorary Professor at Jilin University. She was Honorary Professor at University College London (2015-2020), Professorial Research Associate at SOAS, University London, Visiting Professor at University of Westminster, Research Fellow at LSE, and holder of several Professorships and Senior Fellowships at Peking, Renmin, Fudan and Sun Yat-sen University in China. Her academic publications amount to over three million words (in English and Chinese), including Guanxi or Li shang wanglai?: Reciprocity, social support networks and social creativity in a Chinese village (Chinese 2009, English 2010). Based on the above thorough and detailed ethnography of a Chinese village with longitudinal comparisons, and borrowing and adapting Chinese classical and popular usage of li shang wanglai (礼尚往来), she has been developing a general analytical concept – ‘recipropriety’ (lishang-wanglai 互适), the mechanism by which Chinese society and Chinese social relations operate, thereby contributing to existing theories of reciprocity, relatedness, social exchange, social creativity, social interaction, social networks , social capital and transculturality with characteristics of ‘ritual capital’ (礼仪资本), for understanding and governance of global society.
Xiangqun Chang, Editorial, Journal of China in Global and Comparative Perspectives, Volume 1, 2015, London: Global Century Press. DOI https://doi.org/10.24103/JCGCP.en.2015.1 (常向群,“编者序”,《全球中国比较研究》,2015年第1期,伦敦:全球世纪出版社。DOI https://doi.org/10.24103/JCGCP.en.2015.1)
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Editorial / Xiangqun Chang
Preface / Stephan Feuchtwang
Introduction – Transculturality and the globalization of Chinese social sciences: vocabulary, invention and exploration / Xiangqun Chang
Articles
Universal dream, national dreams and symbiotic dream: reflections on transcultural generativity in China–Europe encounters / Shuo Yu
Fei Xiaotong and the vocabulary of anthropology in China / Stevan Harrell
Supraplanning (moulüe): on the problem of the transfer of earthbound words and concepts in the cultural exchange between China and the West / Harro von Senger
What Western social scientists can learn from the writings of Fei Xiaotong / Gary G. Hamilton
Social egoism and individualism: surprises and questions from a Western anthropologist of China – reading Fei Xiaotong’s contrast between China and the West / Stephan Feuchtwang
Review essays
Chinese social theory in global social science / Martin Albrow
Celestial healing: a comparative study / Ekaterina Zavidovskaya
Book reviews
Ritual and Deference: Extending Chinese Philosophy in a Comparative Context / Review by YU Hua
The Interweaving of Rituals: Funerals in the Cultural Exchange between China and Europe / Review by YU Hua
The Globalization of Chinese Food / Review by Allen Chun
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