Encyclopedia of Modern China (4 volume set) By David Pong
2392 Pages | 2009 | ISBN: 0684315661 | PDF | 100 MB
Covering the period 1800 to the present, this attractive and  authoritative set includes 936 entries and sidebars by nearly 500  authors. Contributors are an admirably international group, representing  (mostly) universities in the U.S., UK, Canada, Australia, Germany, the  Netherlands, Japan, and elsewhere. A large contingent is based in Hong  Kong, while a handful is based in mainland China. Editor Pong states in  his introduction that “the importance of the international character of  this encyclopedia project cannot be overstressed.” Immediately apparent  are the hundreds of high-quality photographs, maps, charts, graphs, and  other illustrations (a high proportion in color).
Another outstanding feature is the section, in volume 4, of 53 primary  source documents ranging chronologically from a letter of advice to  Queen Victoria (1839) to “Charter 08” (2008). There are main entries for  each province (including a map and a box containing key data), major  cities, important people, Chinese relations with countries from  Australia to Vietnam, and hundreds of miscellaneous subjects (Adoptions,  Beggars, Catholicism, Dance, Long March, Monuments, Political culture  since 1900, Teacher education, Weights and measures, etc.). Larger  subjects (for example, Architecture, history of; Chinese overseas;  Energy; River systems; Social welfare) are subdivided into articles by  multiple contributors. Each entry is followed by see also references and  a bibliography, mostly of books. An annotated bibliography in volume 4  describes key sources. Each volume contains a full-color physical map in  the inside front cover and population density map in the inside back  cover. Volume 1 includes Pong's introduction, lists of articles and  contributors, a thematic outline, major chronological periods, and a  chronology. Volume 4 contains Wade-Giles to Pinyin (and vice versa)  conversion tables, a lengthy glossary of Chinese characters (romanized,  Chinese character, and English equivalents), and a thorough index. Pong  notes that “China is now a factor to be reckoned with in practically  every aspect of international life.” He adds, “It is our hope that these  volumes will provide reliable and sophisticated renditions of the  myriad facets of China.” Both authoritative and highly accessible, this  encyclopedia is strongly recommended for academic, public, and  high-school libraries. 
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