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A Mushroom’s Perspective on Chinese Environmental History

Jonathan Schlesinger, CEAS Postdoctoral Associate & Lecturer in History, will discuss Chinese environmental history.

When:
November 11, 2014 12:00pm to 1:30pm
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Jonathan Schlesinger is a historian of China and the natural environment.  His research focuses on the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, when a rush for natural resources transformed China and its frontiers.  His current book project, The Qing Invention of Nature, reveals how Qing subjects, amidst this ecological upheaval, reimagined nature itself.  Drawing on extensive archival research in Ulaanbaatar, Beijing, and Taipei, the book’s multilingual approach re-envisions the construction of frontier and metropole, nature and material culture, and artifice and purity in the Qing empire. Jonathan received his Ph.D. from Harvard in 2012 and is an Assistant Professor of History at Indiana University – Bloomington.  While at Yale, he will be completing his book manuscript, haunting the libraries, and teaching an undergraduate seminar, “History and China’s Environment.”

Please RSVP to eastasian.studies@yale.edu by 11/4

Light lunch will be provided.

Series:  CEAS Postdoctoral Associates Lecture Series

Nicola Di Cosmo is the Henry Luce Foundation Professor of East Asian History in the School of Historical Studies at the Institute for Advanced Study (Princeton), which he joined in 2003. His main areas of research are the relations between China and Central Asia from ancient times to the modern period, the history of foreign dynasties in China, and, more generally, frontier relations seen from archaeological, anthropological, and historical perspectives. Recently he has also published on climate change and the Mongol empire. Before joining the Institute for Advanced studies he was a Research Fellow at Cambridge University and taught at Harvard University (1993-99) and at the University of Canterbury (New Zealand, 1999-2003). He has written on Inner Asian history, Chinese history, and military history and he is the author and co-author of several books, including Ancient China and Its Enemies: The Rise of Nomadic Power in East Asian History (2002), A Documentary History of Manchu-Mongol Relations (1616-1626) (2003), and Diary of a Manchu Soldier in Seventeenth-Century China (2006). He also edited or co-edited several books including Warfare in Inner Asian History, 500-1800 (2002), Political Frontiers, Ethnic Boundaries and Human Geographies in Chinese History (2001) and Military Culture in Imperial China (2009, A Choice Outstanding Academic Title). - See more at: http://ceas.yale.edu/events/nomads-and-climate-chinese-history-scientific-arguments-and-new-perspectives#sthash.GURHeZb5.dpuf

Ideas that climatic events were behind the appearance of nomads as raiders and conquerors of settled lands have been around for a long time.  Unfortunately, historical records are seldom direct in linking cause and effect, and such theories remained highly speculative. Recent advances in historical climatology and other applications of modern science to the past are changing that picture.  But does the input of science produce better history, or just a different version of it? This question will be discussed in relation to the history of nomadic conquests of China and in particular to the rise of the Mongol empire.

Nicola Di Cosmo is the Henry Luce Foundation Professor of East Asian History in the School of Historical Studies at the Institute for Advanced Study (Princeton), which he joined in 2003. His main areas of research are the relations between China and Central Asia from ancient times to the modern period, the history of foreign dynasties in China, and, more generally, frontier relations seen from archaeological, anthropological, and historical perspectives. Recently he has also published on climate change and the Mongol empire. Before joining the Institute for Advanced studies he was a Research Fellow at Cambridge University and taught at Harvard University (1993-99) and at the University of Canterbury (New Zealand, 1999-2003). He has written on Inner Asian history, Chinese history, and military history and he is the author and co-author of several books, including Ancient China and Its Enemies: The Rise of Nomadic Power in East Asian History (2002), A Documentary History of Manchu-Mongol Relations (1616-1626) (2003), and Diary of a Manchu Soldier in Seventeenth-Century China (2006). He also edited or co-edited several books including Warfare in Inner Asian History, 500-1800 (2002), Political Frontiers, Ethnic Boundaries and Human Geographies in Chinese History (2001) and Military Culture in Imperial China (2009, A Choice Outstanding Academic Title). 

- See more at: http://ceas.yale.edu/events/nomads-and-climate-chinese-history-scientific-arguments-and-new-perspectives#sthash.7eYBtmwX.dpuf

Ideas that climatic events were behind the appearance of nomads as raiders and conquerors of settled lands have been around for a long time.  Unfortunately, historical records are seldom direct in linking cause and effect, and such theories remained highly speculative. Recent advances in historical climatology and other applications of modern science to the past are changing that picture.  But does the input of science produce better history, or just a different version of it? This question will be discussed in relation to the history of nomadic conquests of China and in particular to the rise of the Mongol empire.

Nicola Di Cosmo is the Henry Luce Foundation Professor of East Asian History in the School of Historical Studies at the Institute for Advanced Study (Princeton), which he joined in 2003. His main areas of research are the relations between China and Central Asia from ancient times to the modern period, the history of foreign dynasties in China, and, more generally, frontier relations seen from archaeological, anthropological, and historical perspectives. Recently he has also published on climate change and the Mongol empire. Before joining the Institute for Advanced studies he was a Research Fellow at Cambridge University and taught at Harvard University (1993-99) and at the University of Canterbury (New Zealand, 1999-2003). He has written on Inner Asian history, Chinese history, and military history and he is the author and co-author of several books, including Ancient China and Its Enemies: The Rise of Nomadic Power in East Asian History (2002), A Documentary History of Manchu-Mongol Relations (1616-1626) (2003), and Diary of a Manchu Soldier in Seventeenth-Century China (2006). He also edited or co-edited several books including Warfare in Inner Asian History, 500-1800 (2002), Political Frontiers, Ethnic Boundaries and Human Geographies in Chinese History (2001) and Military Culture in Imperial China (2009, A Choice Outstanding Academic Title). 

- See more at: http://ceas.yale.edu/events/nomads-and-climate-chinese-history-scientific-arguments-and-new-perspectives#sthash.7eYBtmwX.dpuIdeas that climatic events were behind the appearance of nomads as raiders and conquerors of settled lands have been around for a long time.  Unfortunately, historical records are seldom direct in linking cause and effect, and such theories remained highly speculative. Recent advances in historical climatology and other applications of modern science to the past are changing that picture.  But does the input of science produce better history, or just a different version of it? This question will be discussed in relation to the history of nomadic conquests of China and in particular to the rise of the Mongol empir

Ideas that climatic events were behind the appearance of nomads as raiders and conquerors of settled lands have been around for a long time.  Unfortunately, historical records are seldom direct in linking cause and effect, and such theories remained highly speculative. Recent advances in historical climatology and other applications of modern science to the past are changing that picture.  But does the input of science produce better history, or just a different version of it? This question will be discussed in relation to the history of nomadic conquests of China and in particular to the rise of the Mongol empire.

- See more at: http://ceas.yale.edu/events/nomads-and-climate-chinese-history-scientific-arguments-and-new-perspectives#sthash.GURHeZb5.dpuf