Corinne Bloch
Alfredo Jocelyn-Holt
Dimitris Kousouris
Sarah Lopez
Valeria Manzano
Bentley Duncan
Harry Harootunian
Ping-ti Ho
Halil Inalcik
Julius Kirshner
William McNeil
Peter Novick
The University of Chicago
Department of History
1126 E. 59th Street, Mailbox 116
Chicago, IL 60637
(773) 702-8390 -- Office
(773) 702-7550 -- Fax
Email: galitto@uchicago.edu
On Research Leave: Winter 2012 & Spring 2012
Documentary on Professor Guy Alitto:
http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XMjk4NTA0NTc2html
http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XMzAwNjU0MzI0.html
Award Ceremony:
http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XMzIzMjczNzI4.html
Field Specialties
Modern Chinese Intellectual History; Chinese Social History; Chinese Local Rural History.
Biography
Guy Alitto has taught in all areas of Chinese studies, including the modern and classical Chinese languages and pre-modern history. Most of his courses, and all of his graduate courses, are in the area of modern Chinese history. His research in the last fifteen years has been in local histories at the village, county, and regional levels (Zouping county in Shandong, the Wanxiarea of southwestern Henan), in family history (the Liangs of Guilin), and social history (Chinese banditry 1880-1950). He is especially interested in the connections between political/social realms and the intellectual/cultural, as manifest in specific individuals and local cultures. He continues to be interested in the ongoing Chinese discussion on culture and modernization.
Publications
"Ershiyi shiji de shijiewenhua hui yanhuazhi rujiahua de wenhua ma?"(Will 21st century culture evolve into a confucianized culture?) in Dushu, (Beijing) 1996 January)
"Zhongguo wenhua xingcheng de yaosu ji qi tezheng" (The essentialelements in the formation of Chinese culture and their special features) in Guo Tingyi xiansheng jiuzhi danchen jinian lunwenji, Taipei 1995
Shijie fanweinei de fanxiandaihua sichao: lun wenhua shouchengzhiyi (Anti-modernizationthought trends in a world-wide perspective: On cultural conservatism) Guiyang,Guizhou Provincial Press, 1991
The Last Confucian: Liang Shu-ming and the Chinese Dilemma of Modernity 2nd ed. 1986, U. of California Press.