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Buddhism, Diplomacy, and Trade: The Realignment of India-China Relations, 600-1400

Contributor(s): Sen, Tansen (Author), Duara, Prasenjit (Foreword by)

ISBN: 9781442254718

Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers

Hardcover
$130.00
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Pub Date: September 10, 2015

Dewey: 303.48251054

LCCN: 2015026488

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Dust Cover, Index, Maps

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 1.10" H x 9.50" L x 6.20" W ( 1.40 lbs) 326 pages

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: This book brings a fresh understanding to cross-cultural Sino-Indian encounters, elucidating for the first time significant changes in the religious, commercial, and diplomatic interactions between the two countries.

Brief description: Prasenjit Duara is Immediate-Past-President of the Association for Asian Studies (2019-2020) and the Oscar Tang Chair of East Asian Studies at Duke University, USA. He was born and educated in India and received his PhD in Chinese history from Harvard University. He was previously Professor and Chair of the Dept of History and Chair of the Committee on Chinese Studies at the University of Chicago (1991-2008). Subsequently, he became Raffles Professor of Humanities and Director, Asia Research Institute at the National University of Singapore (2008-2015). In 1988, he published Culture, Power and the State: Rural North China, 1900-1942, which won the American Historical Association's Fairbank Prize and the Levenson Prize of the Association for Asian Studies, USA. Among his other books are Rescuing History from the Nation (1995), Sovereignty and Authenticity: Manchukuo and the East Asian Modern (2003) and most recently, The Crisis of Global Modernity: Asian Traditions and a Sustainable Future (2014). He is the editor of Decolonization: Now and Then (2004) and the co-editor of A Companion to Global Historical Thought, with Viren Murthy and Andrew Sartori (2014). His work has been widely translated into Chinese, Japanese, Korean and various European languages.

Review Quotes:

"This is a splendid book. It has an overarching theme buttressed by immense detail. It has a central argument, one that defies and challenges a conventional view. Its scholarly appurtenances are superb, including notes, documentation, and index. It is well written and interesting. Indeed, I found it quite difficult to put down, despite its length, weight, and academic content.... It is a real tour de force of religious and diplomatic history and has put forward a new and convincing historical interpretation. It is the most thorough book on the subject of Sino-Indian relations and Buddhism in medieval China and India yet written and will certainly become the standard book on the subject. I suspect it will retain that status for quite a long time. I strongly recommend this book to all those interested in the history of Buddhism, the history of China and India, and the interrelationship among these topics." --China Review International

"China and India have held a trading relationship for thousands of years. Buddhism, Diplomacy and Trade: The Realignment of India-China, 600-1400 focuses on that relationship and how it evolved. The book includes a very detailed analysis of diplomatic relations between the ruling Chinese and Indian dynasties over these centuries. Early in this time period the Chinese held the Indians in high esteem and sought their teachings on Buddhism, diplomatic relations, and healing practices. What began as the migration of the religious culture of Buddhism from India to China eventually became a trade partnership over land and maritime routes.... Readers of Buddhism, Diplomacy and Trade will make a significant investment in learning details of Chinese and Indian diplomatic and economic history. Sen left no stone unturned when it comes to describing the nature of this trade partnership during the time period." --Nathan's Papers: Books for CONGRESS

"Simply tracing the political interaction between the various powers that held sway in these two cultural areas during the span of time covered by Tansen Sen's book is no mean feat. But beyond the detail of events, we find here an elaborate and well-presented argument about India's decline as a source of Chinese Buddhism that is bound to have a widespread impact on both teaching and research.... The sweep of scholarship involved in this big picture is truly exhilarating, and the conclusions offered in general terms are welcome and persuasive." --Journal of Asian Studies

"This is a truly trans-national work by a brilliant young Indian scholar who was brought up in China, trained at the University of Pennsylvania, did research in Kyoto and now teaches in New York. ... The book is very readable, and Sen's arguments are easy to follow. ... It is well researched, well written and stimulating. No doubt its impact on a variety of fields in the study of East and South Asia will be felt for many years to come." --Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies

"Tansen Sen's success in melding two disciplinary approaches, that of social history and the study of Buddhism, make this a seminal work in understanding the very complicated relation between the spread of religious beliefs and economic expansion. Little scholarly attention has been paid to the connections between the two great, vibrant neighboring civilizations that deeply influenced all of Asia in part because of the necessity of dealing with inaccessible texts written in very different languages, but Sen shows himself a master of a vast range of material. That it has seventy pages of bibliographic notes is an indication that Buddhism, Diplomacy, and Trade is a work of formidable scholarship. In showing how, in the period he is studying, the relationship between these two cultures is secularized and transformed, Sen opens up new vistas in both economic and religious history for specialists in Indian and Chinese studies and also for teachers in world history courses." --Ainslee T. Embree, professor emeritus of history, Columbia University

"Tansen Sen's book lifts Buddhist exchanges from the confines of the individual national histories of India and China and places them squarely in a broader regional context. Earlier generations of scholars who focused on the history of Buddhism in either India or China described a decline in the years after 1000, but Sen depicts a thriving Buddhist world with trade between India and China before 1000 and little after, Sen shows conclusively that the trade continued, though in the hands of Arab middlemen. His world is much more interesting as a result." --Valerie Hansen, Yale University

"Tansen Sen's work offers the most thorough overview to date of Sino-Indian relations in the period between the seventh and fifteenth centuries. Forcefully argued, well-documented, and clearly written, it will be of interest to scholars specializing in the history of Buddhism, Chinese and Indian military history, foreign relations of India and China, and economic history in pre-modern Asia, and will also prove helpful to world historians and scholars interested in the roots of modern relations between the two countries." --John Kieschnick, Academia Sinica

"Readers of Buddhism, Diplomacy and Trade will make a significant investment in learning details of Chinese and Indian diplomatic and economic history. Sen left no stone unturned when it comes to describing the nature of this trade partnership during the time period." --Books for Congress

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