Historiography of the Provinces: How China's Regional Pasts Have Been Written
MTA
Method, myth, and memory in provincial scholarship — one province per chapter
This book examines not the provinces themselves but the ways their pasts have been assembled, argued over, and remembered. It treats each provincial-level unit as a laboratory for understanding how evidence is marshaled, how stories congeal into common sense, and how silence can be as consequential as speech. By focusing on method, myth, and memory, the work seeks to uncover why certain accounts gained authority and how they continue to shape scholarship and public life, without adjudicating which version of a provincial past is “true.”
Each chapter offers a concise genealogical map of writing about one province, identifies recurrent debates (concerning ethnicity, migration, religion, economy, environment, and disaster), profiles landmark contributions, and highlights methodological innovations such as prosopography, spatial analysis, ethnographic collaboration, and community archiving. The provinces are presented in alphabetical order to resist teleological readings and encourage readers to forge their own comparative constellations—coastal with inland, borderland with heartland, revolutionary with commercial, agrarian with industrial. Side‑by‑side reading reveals how explanatory models travel and mutate, and it exposes the price of overgeneralization.
Across the cases, myth appears as the shadow of method: foundation stories—sacred mountains, merchant lineages, revolutionary sites, frontier civilizing missions—interweave fact with value and memory with aspiration. Nationalist teleologies often reframe regional pasts as prologues to the nation, while provincial boosterism brands heritage for markets and tourism, and competing empires inscribe their own cartographies onto local terrains. Memory, meanwhile, is traced through museums, monuments, textbooks, festivals, disasters, and everyday practices such as family altars, culinary repertoires, and dialect media, showing how grassroots recollections challenge official scripts and how silence functions as a politics of survival.
The volume is aimed at advanced students and scholars who wish to read provincial histories critically and design their own research. Chapters embed practical heuristics—questions to pose of any source base, strategies for triangulating official and unofficial archives, cautions about sampling bias and period labels, and suggestions for ethically engaged work with local partners. It also flags opportunities to integrate environmental and material evidence (pollen cores, ceramics, cadastral maps, hydrological data) into arguments usually dominated by texts. Ultimately, the book argues that the provincial scale offers a generative vantage point for watching power, culture, and economy articulate over time, urging scholars to hold method, myth, and memory in a single frame to reconstruct alternative lineages of knowledge and tell regional stories that do justice to lived experience.
This book is aimed at advanced undergraduate and graduate students, scholars, and researchers interested in Chinese history, historiography, and memory studies. It would also appeal to historians, anthropologists, and cultural geographers seeking to critically engage with regional narratives in China. Additionally, policymakers and heritage professionals interested in the politics of memory and regional identity formation will find this work valuable.
June 14, 2026
63,695 words
4 hours 28 minutes
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