Download Unbounded Loyalty by Naomi Standen (.PDF)

Unbounded Loyalty: Frontier Crossings in Liao China By Naomi Standen
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Overview: Unbounded Loyalty investigates how frontiers worked before the modern nation-state was invented. The perspective is that of the people in the borderlands who shifted their allegiance from the post-Tang regimes in North China to the new Liao empire (907-1125). Naomi Standen offers new ways of thinking about borders, loyalty, and identity in premodern China. She takes as her starting point the recognition that, at the time, “China” did not exist as a coherent entity, neither politically nor geographically, neither ethnically nor ideologically. Political borders were not the fixed geographical divisions of the modern world, but a function of relationships between leaders and followers. When local leaders changed allegiance, the borderline moved with them. Cultural identity did not determine people’s actions: Ethnicity did not exist. In this context, she argues, collaboration, resistance, and accommodation were not meaningful concepts, and tenth-century understandings of loyalty were broad and various.Standen begins by setting out a revised vocabulary for discussing the choices and actions of frontier crossers and examining the development of ideas of loyalty, or zhong, from their origins to their radical redefinition by eleventh-century historians. She then considers the practice of loyalty by tracing the relationship between allegiance and borderlines from around 900 until the conclusion of the treaty of Shanyuan in 1005.
Genre: Non-Fiction > Biographies & Memoirs

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