The Water Kingdom
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- $18.99
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- $18.99
Publisher Description
Selected as a Book of the Year by The Times and The Economist
China's history is an epic tapestry of courtly philosophies, warring factions and imperial intrigue. Yet, over five thousand years, one ancient element has so dramatically shaped the country's fate that it remains the key to unlocking China's story. That element is water.
In The Water Kingdom Philip Ball takes us on a grand tour of China's defining element, from the rice terraces and towering karts of its battle-worn waterways, to the vast engineering projects that have struggled to contain water's wrath. What surfaces is the secret history of a people and a nation, drawn from its deep reverence for nature's most dynamic force.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Science writer Ball (Patterns in Nature), whose Life's Matrix is a biography of water, detours into history to examine the place of water in Chinese culture, as both real substance and metaphorical ideal. The work is structured quasi-chronologically, and after an introductory chapter on China's two great rivers Yellow and Yangtze Ball delves into the myths and legends of the Middle Kingdom. Working his way forward, he covers various hydrological events, which are often linked to dynastic change, and addresses myriad water-related topics, including the treasure fleets of Admiral Zheng He and a survey of warfare via water. Noting water's centrality to Chinese culture, Ball discusses water imagery and symbolism in Confucianism and Daoism, and in painting and poetry. Reaching the modern era, Ball grants due attention to Mao's symbolic swimming of the Yangtze and the construction of the Three Gorges Dam. Though every nation's culture, politics, and intellectual life are interrelated, Ball makes clear that it's impossible to fully understand China's without incorporating the effect of water on each of those elements, to the point where "water management becomes a moral issue" and the basis of an "orderly and good' " society. This is a one-stop examination of water's primacy in Chinese history, and a well-written one at that.