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    The Ancient Highlands of Southwest China: From the Bronze Age to the Han Empire

    The Ancient Highlands of Southwest China by Yao, Alice;

    From the Bronze Age to the Han Empire

    Series: Oxford Studies in the Archaeology of Ancient States;

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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP USA
    • Date of Publication 7 June 2018

    • ISBN 9780190882341
    • Binding Paperback
    • No. of pages284 pages
    • Size 234x156x15 mm
    • Weight 399 g
    • Language English
    • Illustrations 41 illus.
    • 40

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    Short description:

    The Ancient Highlands of Southwest China offers a vivid account of the history of warrior polities occupying the southwestern frontiers of early China. Placing the archaeology of the "Dian" and its Bronze Age neighbors in dialogue with anthropological theory, Alice Yao shows how local histories of kingship come to challenge and resist imperial governance as well as the production of historiography.

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    Long description:

    Although long considered to be a barren region on the periphery of ancient Chinese civilization, the southwest massif was once the political heartland of numerous Bronze Age polities. Their distinctive material tradition--intricately cast bronze kettle drums and cowrie shell containers--has given archaeologists and historians a glimpse of the extraordinary wealth, artistry, and power exercised by highland leaders over the course of the first millennium BC. In the first century BC, Han imperial conquest reduced local power and began a process of cultural assimilation.

    Instead of a clash between center and periphery or barbarism and civilization, this book examines the classic study of imperial rule as a confrontation between different political temporalities. The author provides an archaeological account of the southwest where Bronze Age landscape formations and funerary traditions bring to light a history of competing warrior cultures and kingly genealogies. In particular, the book illustrates how mourners used funerals and cemetery mounds to transmit social biographies and tribal affiliations across successive generations. Han incorporation thus entangled the orders of state time with the generational cycles of local factions, foregrounding the role of time in the production of power relations in imperial frontiers. The book extends approaches to empires to show how prehistoric time frames continue to shape the futures of frontier subjects despite imperial efforts to unify space and histories.

    ...a groundbreaking work in disentangling the complex history that is often clouded by a center-dominated narrative. It is a crucial theoretical contribution to the field...Her innovative anthropological approach...will contribute to revolutionizing our understanding of transmitted texts (e.g., bronze inscriptions) as the study of them often is often constrained by the text and its immediate archaeological contexts. It will also be valuable in the research of Bronze Age cultures and interactions in the central and marginal areas across China...There is thus no doubt that themethodologies and theories will be extremely influential to related fields. Beyond this, this book is also a great effort echoing James Scott's (2011) research on the
    peripheral societies and their significant role in the making of history.

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    Table of Contents:

    Introduction The Han and the Southern Reaches
    Part I De-centering a Historicity of the Periphery
    Chapter 1 History Regained in Prehistory
    Chapter 2 Death and Funerary Ritual: Where Multiple Time Frames Converge
    Part II Bronze Age Histories
    Chapter 3 Time and Place in the Early Bronze Age
    Chapter 4 Bronze Kettledrums: Emergence of an Iconic Regional Tradition
    Chapter 5 A Southwest Political Time
    Part III Native Subjects and Han Rule
    Chapter 6 A Divided and Entangled Imperial Frontier
    Chapter 7 The D(eb)atability of the Past
    Concluding Remarks on Historiography of Frontiers
    Bibliography
    Index

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