The Chinese History Podcast
Summary: We are a group of Chinese history PhD students looking to make Chinese history more accessible to the general public. Our podcast will cover a broad range of topics in Chinese history or topics related to Chinese history in both the premodern and the modern periods. Our content will be composed of both interviews with scholars and individually narrated episodes on selected topics.
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Podcasts:
Professor Pamela Crossley of Dartmouth University talks about the relationship between history and identity and Qing imperial ideology.
Professor Xing Hang of Brandeis University talks about the Zheng family regime on Taiwan.
Professor Maura Dykstra of Caltech joins us to talk about her new book about an administrative revolution that took place in the Qing Empire.
Professor Chelsea Wang of Claremont McKenna College joins us today to talk about some of the bureaucratic practices of the Ming dynasty which might seem strange and counterintuitive to modern observers but actually have their own logic in the Ming.
UC Berkely PhD student Sean Cronan discusses the Ming’s conquest and rule of Southwest China and their legacy in the region.
Professor Joanna Waley-Cohen of NYU joins us to talk about a very influential school in the study of Qing history - the New Qing History school.
Professor George L. Israel talks about the life, reception, and impact of the great Ming dynasty Neo-Confucian scholar Wang Yangming.
USC PhD candidate Lina Nie shares some new perspectives on the Mongol invasions of Japan, with a focus on the diplomacy that went on before and after the invasions and what that diplomacy can tell us about the interstate order in East Asia during that time.
Professor Nile Green of UCLA talks about the exchange between Chinese Muslim scholars and Arab and Indian Muslim scholars in the 19th and 20th centuries and the implications this had for the development of Islam in China and for the foreign understanding of Islam in China.
In this episode, UCLD Ph.D. student Greg Sattler talks about Sino-Japanese diplomatic exchange from the 1st to the 9th centuries.
Professor Kenneth Swope joins us to talk about military developments in the Late Ming, particularly its military successes, which up until now has usually been ignored.
Dr. Yuan Chen, an environmental historian of premodern China, talks to us about how the Song dynasty capital of Kaifeng impacted the environment of China and changed ecological features.
In this episode, UCLA PhD Candidate Yiming Ha will talk about the forty-four year Mongol-Song war, including the general course of the war, some of the major battles, the weapons, and broader implications.
In this episode, Professor Sixiang Wang of UCLA talks explains the tributary system as a historiographical in the study of Chinese diplomacy in the Early Modern Periodand gives us an introduction to the relationship between Chosŏn Korea and Ming China
King Kwong Wong, an independent scholar specializing in Koryŏ-Mongol relations, gives us an introduction to the history of Koryŏ under it was under Mongol-Yuan domination,