NEW!
The Chinese Academy of Social Sciences Yearbooks, now available online!
NEW MAJOR REFERENCE WORK AND BOOK SERIES
Translation series published in cooperation with academic presses in China
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The Chinese Academy of Social Sciences Yearbooks
中文
Now available in the English language; annual reports in six key areas of research in the People’s Republic of China: Economy, Education, Environment, Law, Population and Labor, and Society. The original versions of these yearbooks are published in China by Social Sciences Academic Press (SSAP), the publishing wing of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS).
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(volume cover)
Brill's Humanities in China Library
中文
This series includes academic work examining and analyzing issues related to history, literature, philosophy, culture, society, and religion in China, translated from the original Chinese volumes. |
Issues in Contemporary Chinese Thought and Culture
中文
The series is intended to acquaint readers outside of the People’s Republic of China with Chinese thinkers’ and scholars’ writings on contemporary problems of China and the world. Produced in cooperation with Chongqing Publishing Group. |
Brill book series on China
Brill journals on China
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NAN NÜ
中文
Edited by H. Zurndorfer 'et al'.
ISSN: 1387-6805
Now also including Twentieth Century China |
T'oung Pao
中文
Edited by P.-E. Will (Collège de France, Paris, France)
and B. ter Haar (Leiden University, The Netherlands)
ISSN: 0082-5433
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The China Nonprofit Review
中文
Chief Editor: Wang Ming (Tsinghua University)
ISSN: 1876-5092 |
Journal of Chinese Overseas
中文
Chief Editor: Tan Chee-Beng (Chinese University of Hong Kong)
ISSN: 1793-0391
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New book series in Brill’s Modern and Contemporary China Studies list
Brill has issued calls for book manuscripts for the following new book series:
Chinese Overseas: History, Literature and Society
Editor: Wang Gungwu (National University Singapore)
Subject Editors: David Der-wei Wang (Literature- Harvard University), Evelyn Hu-DeHart (History- Brown University), Wong Siu-Lun (Sociology- Hong Kong University)
From a tradition of sojourning, the Chinese overseas have established communities around the world that have contributed to the development of China as well as of the countries they have made their homes. There has also grown a new consciousness of identity following the emergence of China as a modern state and the expansion of a global economy. This series aims to study the people and institutions that shaped that identity and are finding ways to make the overseas communities grow. It seeks to bring together scholarly work that examines the spectrum of historical experiences, the writings that capture the quality of migrant lives and the manifold responses to changing social environments.
Modern Chinese Philosophy
Editor: John Makeham (Australian National University)
Unlike classical, medieval, Buddhist or post-Tang Confucian philosophy, Modern Chinese philosophy has been largely ignored in Western studies of Chinese philosophy. This series aims to redress this imbalance by publishing authoritative, innovative and informative studies in Chinese philosophy from the late Qing period to contemporary times. It aims to become the series of choice for prospective authors of studies on Modern Chinese philosophy writing on topics in New Confucian philosophy, modern Buddhist philosophy, Chinese Marxist philosophy, modern Daoist philosophy, as well as works of a comparative nature. It will be “catholic” in its judgement of what constitutes Chinese philosophy, adopting the norms favored by Chinese scholars and intellectuals, as well as those adopted in the Western academy.
Religion in Chinese Societies
Editors: Kenneth Dean (McGill University), Richard Madsen (University of California, San Diego), and David Palmer (University of Hong Kong)
Since the end of the late twentieth century, religion in all its varied forms has come to play an increasingly visible and dynamic role in the transformation of Chinese societies. This vitality of religious practice challenges the secularization theories that are at the heart of modern social science and it directs renewed attention to the role of religion throughout Chinese history. This series features monographs and edited volumes investigating the full range of religious practices in all Chinese societies, including Mainland China, Hong Kong and Macau, Taiwan, as well as overseas Chinese communities throughout Southeast Asia and elsewhere. It includes research from all disciplines in the social sciences and humanities that describes, documents, and interprets religious practices, beliefs, and the many forms of religious community in Chinese societies.
If you are interested in submitting book proposals for any of the above series, please contact Mark Monfasani mmonfasani@brillusa.com.