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A new survey of late Ch'ing history1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 March 2011

Extract

Volume 11 of the Cambridge history of China, the third of the series to appear thus far, is a welcome continuation of Volume 10, which had dealt with the earlier part of the late Ch'ing period. It has been constructed on the same principles as its predecessor, with its contributors, well-known specialists in their field, seeking to present a synthesis of their subject. Hence, it is also basically a collection of essays and thus necessitates a brief mention of each contribution.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Asiatic Society 1983

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References

2 cf. the review by Rodzinski, W. in the Journal of the Oriental Society of Australia, XIII, 1978Google Scholar, and in Kwartalnik Historyczny (The Historical Quarterly), Warsaw, 1979, 3.Google Scholar

3 Of Feuerwerker's many works in this field, the most outstanding is perhaps his earliest, China's early industrialization: Sheng Hsuan-huai (1844–1916) and mandarin enterprise, Cambridge, Mass., 1958.Google Scholar

4 The rise of modem China, London, 1970Google Scholar; China's entry into the family of nations: the diplomatic phase, 1858–1880, Cambridge, Mass., 1960Google Scholar; The Ili crisis: a study of Sino-Russian diplomacy, 1871–1881, Oxford, 1965.Google Scholar

5 Wen-Ian, Fan, Chung-kuo chin-tai shih, Peking, 1956 and 1976Google Scholar; Sheng, Hu, Imperialism and Chinese politics, Peking, 1955. Curiously enough, there is no mention of either of these works in the extensive bibliography appended to Volume 11.Google Scholar

6 Chang has to his credit a fine study, Liang Ch'i-ch'ao and intellectual transition in China, 1890–1907, Cambridge, Mass., 1971Google Scholar. In his essay he has also made full use of Hsiao Kung-chuan's capital work, A modern China and a new world: K'ang Yu-wei, reformer and Utopian, 1858–1927, Seattle, 1975.Google Scholar

7 K'ang Yu-wei had written a special work, Notes on the partition and fall of Poland, which he had submitted to the Emperor in 07, 1898Google Scholar. cf. Rodzinski, W., A history of China, I, Oxford, 1979, 369.Google Scholar

8 The Japanese and Sun Yat-sen, Cambridge, Mass., 1954.Google Scholar

9 Merchants, mandarins and modem enterprise, Cambridge, Mass., 1977.Google Scholar

10 Chinese intellectuals and the revolution of 1911: the birth of modern Chinese radicalism, Seattle, 1969.Google Scholar