Ray Huang was a Chinese-American historian and philosopher. He was an officer in the Nationalist army and fought in the Burma campaigns. He earned a Ph.D in history from the University of Michigan, worked with Joseph Needham and is a contributor of Needham's Science and Civilisation in China. Huang taught in the U.S., and is best known in his later years for the idea of macro-history.
Huang went to the United States to study Chinese History. At the University of Michigan, he received his Bachelor's degree in 1954, his Masters Degree in 1957 and his Doctorate in 1964. He was appointed Visiting Associate Professor at Columbia University in 1967, and a Professor at the State University of New York, New Paltz Branch in 1968–1980. He was a research fellow at the Fairbank Center for East Asian Research at Harvard in 1970. He worked with the leading American Sinologist John K. Fairbank. Nevertheless, Huang and Fairbank disagreed in research methodology. Fairbank liked concentrated analysis in short time frames and limited areas, while Huang liked synthesis covering broad time periods. In 1972, Huang went to Cambridge University and assisted Joseph Needham, who was more sympathetic to Huang's research approach, in Needham's monumental work on the history of Chinese science and technology. Huang's chosen field of study became financial administration in Ming China, and he published one of his major works, Taxation and Finance in Sixteenth Century Ming China, in 1974. He returned to Cambridge in the mid 1970s, and contributed two chapters to the Ming Dynasty Volumes of The Cambridge History of China. Around the late 1970s, he retired from teaching and focused on writing instead, even occasionally contributing to a column in Yazhou Zhoukan. Nonetheless, he often travelled to Taiwan even after retirement to give lectures and participate in various academic exchanges. His other works include The War in Northern Burma, 1587, a Year of No Significance , Broadening the Chinese Field of Vision, Chinese Macrohistory , Conversations about Chinese History on the Banks of the Hudson River, Discussions of Here and There and Old and New, Capitalism and the Twenty First Century, From a Macrohistory Perspective in Reading Jiang Jieshi's Diary, Contemporary Chinese Outlets, The Affair of Wan Chong, Yellow River Blue Mountain: Record of Huang Renzi's Recollections, and Bianjing Unfinished Dreams.
Personal life
He married Gayle Bates in 1966 and the two had a son, Jefferson, a longtime administrator at Claremont McKenna College, as well as two other sons from his wife's previous marriage. He died of a heart attack in 2000.
Books
1587, a Year of No Significance. First published in English, with Chinese and other language translations.