Social Engineering and the Social Sciences in China, 1919-1949
豆瓣
Yung-chen Chiang
简介
In this book Yung-chen Chiang tells the story of the origins, hopes, visions and achievements of the social sciences movement in China during the first half of the twentieth century. He focuses on the efforts of social scientists at three institutions - the Yanjing Sociology Department, Nankai Institute of Economics, and Chen Hansheng's Marxist agrarian research enterprise - to relate their disciplines to the needs of Chinese society. As all three groups received funding from the Rockefeller Foundation, their stories offer a unique window on to Sino-American interactions, revealing how the social sciences became a lingua franca of the cultural frontier. Drawing on an impressive variety of archival materials used here for the first time, this study corrects and enriches current scholarship, presenting both a more detailed and panoramic view. Chiang's analysis engages the complex and broader issues of the transfer, indigenization and international patronage of social science disciplines.
目录
Ackowledgments
Notes on names and Romanization
Introduction
The Yanjing sociology department: the social service phase, 1919-1925
The Yanjing Sociology Department: from social service to social engineering, 1925-1945
The Nankai Institute of Economics: the germinating stage, 1927-1931
The Nankai Institute of Economics: academic entrepreneurship and social engineering, 1931-1947
Marxism, revolution and the study of Chinese society
Genesis of a Marxist social science enterprise in the early 1930s
The social sciences, agrarian China and the advocacy of revolution
The Rockefeller foundation and Chinese academic enterprise
Conclusion: the legacy
Glossary
Bibliography
Index