Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 August 2015
Contrary to the long-standing idea of a scientific failure in early modern China as compared to Europe, some recent work has emphasized the existence of a tradition of ‘evidential’ research in the natural sciences, antiquarianism, and geography, especially during the Sung, Ming, and Qing periods. This article seeks to develop this new perspective by offering a comparative history of the genres of travel writing and ethnography in early modern Europe and Ming/early Qing China. We argue that there were qualitative as well as quantitative differences in the way that these genres functioned in each cultural area. Even when we find apparent similarities, we note different chronological rhythms and a different position of these genres of travel writing within a wider cultural field—what we might term their ‘cultural relevance’. The specific nature of Chinese state imperialism—or, conversely, the particular nature of European overseas colonialism—played a role in determining the type of ethnographic approach that came to predominate in each cultural area. These parallels and differences suggest a fresh perspective on the cultural origins of the ‘great divergence’.
Originally presented at the British Academy conference, ‘The Production and Circulation of Printed Books in the Occident and Orient, from the Accession of the Tang Dynasty (circa 618) to the First Industrial Revolution’, London, February 2013. We are grateful to Patrick O'Brien, Ashley Millar, and two anonymous readers for their comments.
1 Benjamin, Elman (2005), On Their Own Terms. Science in China, 1500–1900 (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press)Google Scholar. This represents a revisionist perspective on the idea of a static Chinese science, and builds upon the research by Joseph Needham and Nathan Sivin. However, in a groundbreaking essay comparing early modern antiquarianisms, Peter Miller notes that the evidential focus of kaozheng xue discussed by Elman was more textual than was the norm with European antiquarianism in the same period. Miller, Peter N. (2012), ‘Comparing antiquarianisms: a view from Europe’, in Miller, P.N. and Louis, F. (eds) Antiquarianism and Intellectual Life in Europe and China, 1500–1800 (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press), p. 130CrossRefGoogle Scholar. It is also worth noting that, well before the age of Western industrial imperialism, the negative assessment of Chinese natural (as opposed to moral) science goes back to Jesuit observers and to the Enlightenment writers who read them. See Michael, Adas (1989), Machines as Measure of Men: science, technology and ideologies of Western dominance (Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press), pp. 69–95Google Scholar. A more nuanced view is to be found in Millar Ashley (forthcoming) Faithful Witnesses? British and French perspectives on China's political economy during the Enlightenment (Montreal and Kingston: MQUP).
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77 Brook, Confusions of Pleasure, p. 120. The minister responsible was Liu Daxia, in a peculiar moment of extreme anti-maritime feeling.
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79 We expand this argument in Joan-Pau, Rubiés (2012), ‘From the history of travayle to the history of travel collections: the rise of an early modern genre’, in Carey, D. and Jowitt, C. (eds) Richard Hakluyt and Travel Writing in Early Modern Europe (Farnham: Ashgate/Hakluyt Society Extra Series), pp. 25–41Google Scholar.
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81 Ibid., pp. 220–221.