出版社: Manchester University Press
出版年: 2019-10-14
页数: 232
定价: GBP 80.00
装帧: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781526133427
内容简介
This book examines British imperial attitudes towards China during their early encounters from 1792 to 1840. It makes the first attempt to bring together the political history of Sino-Western relations and cultural studies of British representations of China, as a new way of understanding the origins of the Opium War – a deeply consequential event which arguably reshaped relations between China and the West for the next hundred years. The book focuses on the crucial half-century before the war, a medium-term (moyenne durée) period which scholars such as Kitson and Markley have recently compared in importance to that of the American and French Revolutions.
This study investigates a range of Sino-British political moments of connection, from the Macartney embassy (1792–94), through the Amherst embassy (1816–17) to the Napier incident (1834) and the lead-up to the opium crisis (1839–40). It examines a wealth of primary materials, some of which have not received sufficient attention before, focusing on the perceptions formed by those who had first-hand experience of China or possessed political influence in Britain. The book shows that through this period Britain produced increasingly hostile feelings towards China, but at the same time British opinion formers and decision-makers disagreed with each other on fundamental matters such as whether to adopt a pacific or aggressive policy towards the Qing and the disposition of the Chinese emperor. This study, in the end, reveals how the idea of war against the Chinese empire was created on the basis of these developing imperial attitudes.
作者简介
高昊 英国埃克塞特大学帝国与全球史副教授
目录
Pages: Cover–iv (5 total)
Introduction
Pages: 1–18 (18 total)
Part I: The embassies
Chapter 1: The Macartney embassy
Pages: 21–50 (30 total)
Chapter 2: The Amherst embassy
Pages: 51–92 (42 total)
Part II: Prelude to the Opium War
Chapter 3: The EIC versus free traders
Pages: 95–121 (27 total)
Chapter 4: ‘Show of force’
Pages: 122–144 (23 total)
Chapter 5: Justifying the Opium War
Pages: 145–179 (35 total)
Conclusion
Pages: 180–184 (5 total)
Bibliography
Pages: 185–203 (19 total)
Index
Pages: 204–210 (7 total)