Professor of History and East Asian Studies
John R. Coleman Professor of Social Sciences
Faculty Director, Center for Peace and Global Citizenship (CPGC)
Ph.D. University of Pennsylvania, 1983
BA, Bard College, 1968
HIST 120, Individual and Society in China
Hist/East 200: Methods and Approaches in East Asian Studies
HIST 260, Mid Imperial China
HIST 261, Late Imperial China
HIST 263, The Chinese Revolution
HIST 347, Topics in Chinese History
HIST 349, Topics in Comparative History
Smith offers courses on Chinese, East Asian, and comparative history, with a special focus on the social and cultural history of China from the tenth through the twentieth century. Recent courses include surveys of China in the mid-imperial (10th through 16th century) and late-imperial (17th through 20th century) eras, as well as seminars on warrior and outlaw sagas in China and Japan, modern Chinese political culture, and China’s place in global history.
Research
Interests:
Smith’s scholarship is centered on the institutional, social, and cultural history of mid-imperial China, spanning the Song (960-1279), Yuan (1271-1368), and Ming (1368-1644) dynasties. He has written books and articles on state intervention in the Song economy, Chinese culture and society under Mongol rule, war and the northern frontier as a factor in political culture, and -- most recently -- on the great 16th century novel Shuihu zhuan (Water Margin) as a window onto the military subculture of North China from the 10th century onwards. In addition to co-editing Volume 5A of The Cambridge History of China, he is currently at work on a book project provisionally entitled “War and Political Culture in Mid-Imperial China: The Song Military and the Literati State.”
Contact:
History Department, Haverford College | 370 Lancaster Ave. | Haverford,
PA 19041 | (610) 896 -1075