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Original Article

Guest Editor's Introduction

Pages 3-11 | Published online: 08 Dec 2014
 

Abstract

One of the most dynamic and innovative subfields within Chinese social and economic history in the past two decades has been regional and local history, which has seen an explosion of research, conferences, and publications.1 Influenced by trends in Japanese and Western scholarship, regional history, practiced both by historians and anthropologists, has become one of the dominant strands in late imperial and Republican history.2 Not only has research in local history continued in its traditional areas of concentration—such as the major cities and a few rural areas where the source material is particularly rich, like Huizhou or the Pearl River Delta—but its scope has also broadened considerably, and it is safe to say that local historians are now at work in virtually every part of China. Professional academic historians frequently work closely with local cultural cadres, who, as part of their efforts to compile the latest editions of local gazetteers, are gathering all kinds of local source materials and publishing some of them in the various Literary and Historical Documents (Wenshi ziliao) series.3 The development of the field represents more than just a turn to increasing use of local sources to explore familiar issues such as peasant rebellions or the appearance of the "sprouts of capitalism"; indeed, the recent scholarship under discussion here reflects very little of the predictably formulaic quality of much scholarship in the People's Republic of China in the Maoist era.

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