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Chinese History
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Chinese history spans thousands of years and offers some of the richest material available for academic study. It appears across disciplines including world history, East Asian studies, political science, and cultural studies. Students are drawn to it because it encompasses the rise and fall of powerful dynasties, the spread of influential philosophical traditions, and transformations in governance, society, and trade. Key subjects that recur in academic writing include the reign of emperors, the consolidation of imperial power, and the ways rulers maintained control over vast territories and populations across different historical periods.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Some focus on individual rulers and dynasties, such as Qin Shi Huangdi, the Ming emperors, and Zhu Yuanzhang, examining how they acquired and exercised power. Others take a broader historical lens, addressing the Mongol conquest of China or East Asian export trade with Western Europe in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Cultural and religious topics also appear, including Buddhism and Confucianism and practices like foot binding. Some papers engage with modern history or use film, such as Zhangke Jia's Still Life, as a lens for understanding contemporary Chinese life.

A strong essay on Chinese history requires a focused thesis rather than a sweeping survey of events. Evidence drawn from primary sources, imperial records, or close readings of specific policies and practices tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating Chinese history as a single unified narrative — strong essays instead identify a specific period, ruler, or theme and analyze it with precision and contextual depth.

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Research Paper Undergraduate
Taoism Bending Towards the Way
Next to Confucianism, the most important philosophy of the Chinese has undoubtedly been that of Taoism." (DeBarry, Chan & Bloom, p.48) Taoism is a more elusive philosophy than the more concrete, ancestor-focused and…
Paper Doctorate
Chinese Cultural History the Female
The Female as the Underappreciated Manager
Research Paper Undergraduate
History in three keys
Cohen, Paul a. History in Three Keys. New York: Columbia University Press, 1998.
Research Paper Undergraduate
World history concepts and major developments
¶ … rise of East Asia was one of the most significant events of the 14th century. With a culture that spans some three thousand years, the East Asian civilizations were at one time much more sophisticated than its…
Paper Doctorate
Honor Code of Chinese Warriors the Objective
The objective of this study is to discuss the honor code of warrior-heroes in Chinese history and to answer to what the honor code consists of and the origin of the honor code. As well, this study will examine how this honor code influenced the intentions, words, and actions of the warriors and how the honor code manifests itself in novels, how and when the codes apply and what competing visions existed in human conduct.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Nationalism versus globalization in Taiwan
¶ … press on globalization and its economic impact has focused on the incredible growth of China, Japan and Korea, Taiwan's emergence as a world player almost more dramatic. Once an ostracized island confederation,…
Paper Undergraduate
China's Modernization and the Opium Wars' Impact on the Qing Dynasty
During the eighteenth century, China would undergo a transformation. Part of the reason for this was because different innovations (such as the invention of gun powder), would allow both the European Monarchs and the…
Research Paper Doctorate
Hong Kong and Taiwan Both
Both Hong Kong and Taiwan have had a long history with China, dating as far back as the mid-1500's. Each country has had vast and far reaching influence on the culture and practices of China, as both independently…
Paper Undergraduate
Leviathan Thomas Hobbes and Mo
This paper is a synthesis paper about Thomas Hobbe's Leviathan, and Mo Tzu's General Writings. The ideas of Hobbes center around the idea of man being in a constant warring state, and that war is fought for profit or for glory. Mo Tzu takes the opposite branch, and believes in the idea of Universal Love. This idea is essentially the idea of equality of man and the rejection of war as a legitimate tool.
Paper Undergraduate
Migratory Labor Identity in Exile:
Identity in Exile: The Grapes of Wrath, Jasmine and China Men