Fr. 139.00

Men in the Middle - Shaping Great Power-China Relationships, 1842-1949

English · Hardback

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Description

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There is no time period or theme that promotes more engagement, by both Chinese historians and historians of China, than what the Peoples Republic of China describes as "the century of humiliation," the period of the "unequal treaties," in which first Qing and then Republican China found themselves penetrated systematically by external Great Powers - which then integrated China, on terms largely not of its own choosing, into a now global political economic order. This created the modern "China Question": how would an emerging China fit into a new world order that it entered through the intercessions of others? But there is at least one very important dimension that remains underexplored: the perceptions, policies, views, and agendas of the "metropolitan authorities" among the external Great Powers. This book will argue that it is enlightening to examine a particular kind of individual involved: one who worked in China, either as a sojourner or for a career, and, while in China, had a direct responsibility that moved in two directions: having to answer up to some sort of higher authority or body in their "home country," while also exercising direct responsibilities in China, including daily contact with the Chinese population.

About the author










Charles J. Burgess,
National University of Singapore, Singapore;
Brian P. Farrell
, National University of Singapore, Singapore.



Summary

There is no time period or theme that promotes more engagement, by both Chinese historians and historians of China, than what the Peoples Republic of China describes as "the century of humiliation," the period of the "unequal treaties," in which first Qing and then Republican China found themselves penetrated systematically by external Great Powers – which then integrated China, on terms largely not of its own choosing, into a now global political economic order. This created the modern "China Question": how would an emerging China fit into a new world order that it entered through the intercessions of others? But there is at least one very important dimension that remains underexplored: the perceptions, policies, views, and agendas of the "metropolitan authorities" among the external Great Powers. This book will argue that it is enlightening to examine a particular kind of individual involved: one who worked in China, either as a sojourner or for a career, and, while in China, had a direct responsibility that moved in two directions: having to answer up to some sort of higher authority or body in their "home country," while also exercising direct responsibilities in China, including daily contact with the Chinese population.

Product details

Assisted by Charles J. Burgess (Editor), Brian P. Farrell (Editor)
Publisher Oldenbourg
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 03.11.2025
 
EAN 9783111570501
ISBN 978-3-11-157050-1
No. of pages 215
Weight 500 g
Illustrations 18 b/w ill., 4 b/w tbl.
Subjects Humanities, art, music > History > Modern era up to 1918

Internationale Beziehungen, Modernes China, Militärgeschichte, Biographie, Biography, HISTORY / General, HISTORY / Military / General, POLITICAL SCIENCE / International Relations / General, military history, International Relations, auseinandersetzen, Modern China

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