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Publications and other Resources >>
New Publications
Anglo-Chinese Encounters since 1800: War, Trade,
Science and Governance
by Wang Gungwu (National University Singapore)
2003
052182639X Hardback
Published by: Cambridge
University Press
Synopsis:
Chinese encounters with the British were more than merely
those between two great powers. There was the larger canvas
of the Empire and Commonwealth where the two peoples traded
and interacted. In China, officials and merchants had to place
the British beside other enterprising foreign peoples who
were equally intent on influencing developments there. There
were also Chinese who encountered the British in personal
ways, and individual British who ventured into a ‘vast unknown’
with its deep history. Wang Gungwu’s book, based on lectures
linking China and the Chinese with imperial Britain, examines
the possibilities in, as well as the limits of, their encounters.
It takes the story beyond the clichés of opium, fighting,
and the diplomatic skills needed to fend off rivals and enemies,
and probes some areas of more intimate encounters, not least
the beginnings of a wider English-speaking future.
Contents:
1. Introduction; 2. To fight; 3. To trade; 4. To convert;
5. To rule; 6. Beyond Waley’s list.
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