The Genesis of East Asia, 221 B.C.-A.D. 907.

AuthorJay, Jennifer W.
PositionBook Review

The Genesis of East Asia, 221 B.C.-A.D. 907. By CHARLES HOLCOMBE. Asian Interactions and Comparisons. Honolulu: UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII PRESS, 2001. Pp. xii + 332, maps. $53 (cloth); $24.95 (paper).

For those of us who teach the premodern history of East Asia, defining the region has become easier with Charles Holcombe's study of the "dynamic process of ethnogenesis in East Asia" (p. 6) that took place in the first millennium. The conceptualization of the region as a geographical and cultural zone can now be enriched by rethinking the parameters of not just East Asia, but the historical evolution and configuration of each of the members--the areas now known in modern history as China, Korea, Japan, and Vietnam.

At the heart of the conceptual framework is the sinification (or sinicization) thesis, which Holcombe has drastically modified by drawing upon the exciting textual, anthropological, linguistic, and archaeological research of the past several decades. Instead of the outdated and simplistic traditional view of the Central Plain (Yellow River Valley in north China) civilizing and assimilating the "barbarian" peripheral zones at and beyond the borders, we now observe that China from antiquity was already a diverse and pluralistic entity. From around 1000 B.C. to the third century, the "nominal universe" was tianxia, or all-under-heaven, which under the loose Zhou vassalage system and its core culture of the Chinese language and Zhou traditions, embraced a multitude of states and local regions in the north, west, and south, whose localized assimilation, and sometimes non-assimilation, of Central Plain social, economic, and political cultures contributed to the diversity of a reconfigured China. The prestige of th e Central Plain heritage is attested by the overwhelming number of Chinese and other East Asian imperial families claiming legitimacy on the basis of alleged descent from Central Plain ancestry--tenuous claims in light of archaeological records.

Holcombe argues that the continued process of genesis and configuration that led to the creation of East Asia took place in the first millennium, particularly under the ramifications of two critical watersheds--the Qin unification that occurred in 221 B.C. and the end of the Tang dynasty in 907. The Qin regime extended its empire into territories now known as parts of Korea and Vietnam, but it was a century later before its successor, the Han dynasty, brought into these lands the political...

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