John Dardess
John Wolfe Dardess was an American historian of China, especially the Ming dynasty. He wrote nine books on the topic, including A Ming Society. He learned Chinese in the American military, and was posted to Taiwan. Earning his PhD from Columbia University in 1968, he taught at the University of Kansas from 1966 to 2002, becoming director of the Center for East Asian Studies in 1995. One obituary summarised his principal legacy as consisting “not in any particular interpretation he offered, but in a voracious appetite for delving into the written sources, the courage to ask stimulating new questions, and the historical imagination to wonder about the common humanity that linked the authors he read and their communities with his own times." He drew notice for pointing to continuities in Chinese history and drawing parallels between contemporary and Ming politics.
Books
Dardess's books include:- Conquerors and Confucians: Aspects of Political Change in Late Yuan China
- Confucianism and Autocracy: Professional Elites in the Founding of the Ming Dynasty
- A Ming Society: T'ai-ho County, Kiangsi, in the Fourteenth to Seventeenth Centuries
- Blood and History in China. The Donglin Faction and Its Repression, 1620-1627
- Governing China, 150-1850
- Ming China 1368–1644: A Concise History of a Resilient Empire
- A Political Life in Ming China: A Grand Secretary and His Times
- Four Seasons: A Ming Emperor and His Grand Secretaries in Sixteenth-century China
- ''More Than the Great Wall: The Northern Frontier and Ming National Security, 1368–1644''