Unveiling Patterns in Historical Sources: Exploring Chinese History through Social Network Analysis
Chen, Song (1); Wang, Xinxuan (2); Hong, Jianxuan (3); Fang, Xiaochen (2); Guo, Wenqian (4); Chen, Meilong (5); Xu, Xiaotong (6); Zhong, Junnan (7); Chen, Ronggang (8); Zhu, Hao (9); Fang, Shuyi (3); Liu, Yuxin (10); Wang, Linxu (11); Lang, Chao (12); Ma, Yirui (13); Xiao, Wenxin (12); Zhang, Zixi (14); Liu, Guanhong (15); Luo, Jingxi (3); Yan, Chihao (16); Liu, Yan (17); Liu, Chaoran (18); Tong, Yao (19)
1: Bucknell University, United States of America; 2: Capital Normal University, China; 3: Renmin University of China, China; 4: University of Oxford, United Kingdom; 5: École des hautes études en sciences sociales (EHESS), France; 6: Lingnan University, Hong Kong, China; 7: Xiamen University, China; 8: The London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), United Kingdom; 9: Ghent University, Belgium; 10: Harbin Normal University, China; 11: Peking University, China; 12: Harvard University, United States of America; 13: University of Wisconsin, Madison, United States of America; 14: Columbia University, United States of America; 15: University of Chicago, United States of America; 16: Zhongnan University of Economics and Law, China; 17: Fudan University, China; 18: Tsinghua University, China; 19: University of Michigan, United States of America
HTML XMLThis panel showcases a burgeoning realm of scholarship that employs social network analysis to delve into diverse facets of Chinese history, ranging from ninth-century court politics and late imperial economic activities, to early twentieth-century women’s groups, and beyond.