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Understanding China, 1700-2000: A Data Analytic Approach, Part 1

Understanding China, 1700-2000: A Data Analytic Approach, Part 1

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8.7/10 (Our Score)
Product is rated as #93 in category Data Science

The purpose of this course is to summarize new directions in Chinese history and social science produced by the creation and analysis of big historical datasets based on newly opened Chinese archival holdings, and to organize this knowledge in a framework that encourages learning about China in comparative perspective. Our course demonstrates how a new scholarship of discovery is redefining what is singular about modern China and modern Chinese history. Current understandings of human history and social theory are based largely on Western experience or on non–Western experience seen through a Western lens. This course offers alternative perspectives derived from Chinese experience over the last three centuries. We present specific case studies of this new scholarship of discovery divided into two stand–alone parts, which means that students can take any part without prior or subsequent attendance of the other part. Part 1 (this course) focuses on comparative inequality and opportunity and addresses two related questions ’Who rises to the top?’ and ’Who gets what?’. Part 2 (https://www.coursera.org/learn/understanding–china–history–part–2) turns to an arguably even more important question ’Who are we?’ as seen through the framework of comparative population behavior – mortality, marriage, and reproduction – and their interaction with economic conditions and human values. …

Instructor Details

James Z. Lee (1952 -) is Dean and Chair Professor of the School of Humanities and Social Sciences at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Faculty Associate at the Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research at the University of Michigan, and Jiangxi Chair Visiting Scholar at Shanghai Jiao Tong University. Professor Lee’s published work includes six authored or co-authored books, six co-edited books or textbooks, and sixty articles focused largely on the demographic, ethnic, fiscal and frontier history of late imperial China, as well as on the population behavior, social organization, and social mobility of contemporary China. A John Simon Guggenheim Fellow (2004), Professor Lee and his co-authors have received five best book awards from various learned societies in North America and Asia.

Specification: Understanding China, 1700-2000: A Data Analytic Approach, Part 1

Duration

8 hours

Year

2017

Certificate

Yes

Quizzes

Yes

13 reviews for Understanding China, 1700-2000: A Data Analytic Approach, Part 1

4.5 out of 5
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  1. lichuangye

    good

    Helpful(0) Unhelpful(0)You have already voted this
  2. Asir A

    I loved the course. It gave me a totally different view of pre revolution China. Even though I am not into quantitative data, I still learned from the conclusions and interpretations of the data.

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  3. Fabian F

    I liked the data driven, very analytic approach to understand Chines history better. Thank you for a great course.

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  4. Nhat L

    It is a very short and concise course.

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  5. Matt M

    Informative, relevant, and unique. The focus on recent discoveries unearthed through original research is refreshing.

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  6. Sara T

    Well presented material, new and surprising insights. Rewarding experience.

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  7. JOHN Q

    I enjoyed this course tremendously, and discovered that there was a vast amount of information that I needed to learn about this SuperPower. China is an amazing country with an enormous population and economy, a history of remarkable achievement, and yet still unknown in many ways. Thanks for putting this course together.

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  8. Mederic D

    Very interesting, I would recommend this course.

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  9. Jonathan G

    This course was boring as hell.

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  10. Jialin B

    Brilliant course. High quality information, comprehensive sources and interesting tests. Part 1 puts the revolution in a new perspective and connects imperial China with contemporary China. The course also throws a light on equality vs inequality globally and in China. The course is controversial in that it reflects duly and appropriately the complexity of Chinese social history and its development as opposed to the black and white view on China which still persists in the West. I also liked the very down to earth approach of Prof Lee.

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  11. Yasmin C

    A little bit slow at first, amazing for people who just want to have some contact with the history and culture of china!

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  12. Gabriel M R L

    Very good

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  13. Joy S

    The truth about China. This is fact, by evidence, by statistics. Very good to know.

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    Understanding China, 1700-2000: A Data Analytic Approach, Part 1
    Understanding China, 1700-2000: A Data Analytic Approach, Part 1

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