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Hwang, Yin (2014) Victory Pictures in a Time of Defeat: Depicting War in the Print and Visual Culture of Late Qing China 1884 ‐ 1901
Hwang, Yin (2014) Victory pictures in a time of defeat: depicting war in the print and visual culture of late Qing China 1884 ‐ 1901. PhD Thesis. SOAS, University of London http://eprints.soas.ac.uk/18449 Copyright © and Moral Rights for this thesis are retained by the author and/or other copyright owners. A copy can be downloaded for personal non‐commercial research or study, without prior permission or charge. This thesis cannot be reproduced or quoted extensively from without first obtaining permission in writing from the copyright holder/s. The content must not be changed in any way or sold commercially in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders. When referring to this thesis, full bibliographic details including the author, title, awarding institution and date of the thesis must be given e.g. AUTHOR (year of submission) "Full thesis title", name of the School or Department, PhD Thesis, pagination. VICTORY PICTURES IN A TIME OF DEFEAT Depicting War in the Print and Visual Culture of Late Qing China 1884-1901 Yin Hwang Thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the History of Art 2014 Department of the History of Art and Archaeology School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London 2 Declaration for PhD thesis I have read and understood regulation 17.9 of the Regulations for students of the School of Oriental and African Studies concerning plagiarism. I undertake that all the material presented for examination is my own work and has not been written for me, in whole or in part, by any other person. -
Whose History and by Whom: an Analysis of the History of Taiwan In
WHOSE HISTORY AND BY WHOM: AN ANALYSIS OF THE HISTORY OF TAIWAN IN CHILDREN’S LITERATURE PUBLISHED IN THE POSTWAR ERA by LIN-MIAO LU (Under the Direction of Joel Taxel) ABSTRACT Guided by the tenet of sociology of school knowledge, this study examines 38 Taiwanese children’s trade books that share an overarching theme of the history of Taiwan published after World War II to uncover whether the seemingly innocent texts for children convey particular messages, perspectives, and ideologies selected, preserved, and perpetuated by particular groups of people at specific historical time periods. By adopting the concept of selective tradition and theories of ideology and hegemony along with the analytic strategies of constant comparative analysis and iconography, the written texts and visual images of the children’s literature are relationally analyzed to determine what aspects of the history and whose ideologies and perspectives were selected (or neglected) and distributed in the literary format. Central to this analysis is the investigation and analysis of the interrelations between literary content and the issue of power. Closely related to the discussion of ideological peculiarities, historians’ research on the development of Taiwanese historiography also is considered in order to examine and analyze whether the literary products fall into two paradigms: the Chinese-centric paradigm (Chinese-centricism) and the Taiwanese-centric paradigm (Taiwanese-centricism). Analysis suggests a power-and-knowledge nexus that reflects contemporary ruling groups’ control in the domain of children’s narratives in which subordinate groups’ perspectives are minimalized, whereas powerful groups’ assumptions and beliefs prevail and are perpetuated as legitimized knowledge in society. -
军jūn Army / Military / Arms / CL:個/ |个/ [Ge4] Results Beginning with 军
军 jūn army / military / arms / CL:個 / |个 / [ge4] Results beginning with 军 军 事 jūn shì military affairs / military matters / military 军队 jūn duì army / troops / CL:支 / [zhi1],個 / |个 / [ge4] 军 团 jūn tuán corps / legion 军 人 jūn rén serviceman / soldier / military personnel 军 官 jūn guān officer (military) 军 方 jūn fāng military 军 区 jūn qū geographical area of command / (PLA) military district 军 用 jūn yòng (for) military use / military application 军营 jūn yíng barracks / army camp 军 训 jūn xùn military practice, esp. for reservists or new recruits / military training as a (sometimes compulsory) subject in schools and colleges / drill 军 医 jūn yī military doctor 军 师 jūn shī (old) military counselor / (coll.) trusted adviser 军 委 jūn wěi Military Commission of the Communist Party Central Committee 军 校 jūn xiào military school / military academy 军舰 jūn jiàn warship / military naval vessel / CL:艘 / [sou1] 军 民 jūn mín army-civilian / military-masses / military-civilian 军衔 jūn xián army rank / military rank 军 士 jūn shì sergeant 军 工 jūn gōng [FR] industrie de guerre ; projet de travaux militaires 军 装 jūn zhuāng military uniform 军 火 jūn huǒ weapons and ammunition / munitions / arms 军 刀 jūn dāo military knife / saber 军 力 jūn lì military power 军 长 jūn zhǎng [FR] Corps d'armée 军阀 jūn fá military clique / junta / warlord 军 政 jūn zhèng army and government 军 演 jūn yǎn military exercises 军 服 jūn fú [FR] uniforme militaire 军 情 jūn qíng military intelligence 军 旅 jūn lu:3 army 军费 jūn fèi military expenditure 军 心 jūn xīn [FR] moral 军 备 jūn bèi (military) arms / armaments -
Section 3 – Constitutionalism and the Wars with China and Russia
Section 3 – Constitutionalism and the wars with China and Russia Topic 58 – The struggle to revise the unequal treaties What strategies did Japan employ in order to renegotiate the unequal treaties signed with | 226 the Western powers during the final years of the shogunate? The problem of the unequal treaties The treaties that the shogunate signed with the Western powers in its final years were humiliating to the Japanese people due to the unequal terms they forced upon Japan. Firstly, any foreign national who committed a crime against a Japanese person was tried, not in a Japanese court, but in a consular court set up by the nation of the accused criminal.1 Secondly, Japan lost the right, just as many other Asian countries had, to set its own import tariffs. The Japanese people of the Meiji period yearned to end this legal discrimination imposed by the Western powers, and revision of the unequal treaties became Japan's foremost diplomatic priority. *1=The exclusive right held by foreign countries to try their own citizens in consular courts for crimes committed against Japanese people was referred to as the right of consular jurisdiction, which was a form of extraterritoriality. In 1872 (Meiji 5), the Iwakura Mission attempted to discuss the revision of the unequal treaties with the United States, but was rebuffed on the grounds that Japan had not reformed its legal system, particularly its criminal law. For this reason, Japan set aside the issue of consular jurisdiction and made recovery of its tariff autonomy the focal point of its bid to revise the unequal treaties. -
TAI 1 Leiden University Asian Studies (Research), Humanities
TAI 1 Leiden University Asian Studies (Research), Humanities REINTERPRETING THE PAST FOR THE FUTURE: STUDY ON THE HISTORICAL WRITINGS OF PHAN BỘI CHÂU AND HOÀNG CAO KHẢI RAN TAI Supervisor: Dr. Kiri Paramore TAI 2 Abstract This thesis compares the texts of Vietnamese national history written in the colonial period by two competing reformist intellectuals Phan Bội Châu and Hoàng Cao Khải. Exposed to the currents of thought such as Social Darwinism and the theory of evolution in early twentieth century Asia, both of them realised the backwardness of Vietnam and stressed the necessity of reform. However, Phan decided to fight against the French while Hoàng chose to collaborate with them. As will be shown in this thesis, both Phan and Hoàng, despite the difference of their political stances, endeavoured to justify their respective propositions by constructing the historic past of Vietnam. As two reformist intellectuals, Phan Bội Châu and Hoàng Cao Khải regarded the introduction of Western civilisation in late nineteenth century Asia as a key moment for the Vietnamese people to get rid of their backward conditions and evolve into a civilised nation. However, they shared different opinions about the nature of this transition of Vietnam. Phan Bội Châu was inclined to view the French invasion as a “Messianic” moment which marked the “rupture” between the past and present in Vietnamese history. In his historiography, Vietnamese society in the past centuries was inherently barbarous, and this barbarousness led to the current backwardness of the country. Meanwhile, Phan Bội Châu, as an anti-French activist, emphasised that the salvation of the Vietnamese nation should never rely upon the assistance of France. -
The Reorganization of the Maritime Order in Coastal Area Of
The Reorganization of the Maritime Order in Coastal Area of Title South China during the Mid-nineteenth Century: The British Royal Navy and the Pirates of Fujian and Guangdong Author(s) MURAKAMI, Ei Citation 東洋史研究 (2007), 65(4): 800-761 Issue Date 2007-03 URL https://doi.org/10.14989/138207 Right Type Journal Article Textversion publisher Kyoto University JfU¥:5!:.1iJfJ'E *~+1i.§ *lZ9% 2007· 03 1i.tJ: ~I ~ IL 800 THE REORGANIZATION OF THE MARITIME ORDER IN COASTAL AREA OF SOUTH CHINA DURING THE MID-NINETEENTH CENTURY: THE BRITISH ROYAL NAVY AND THE PIRATES OF FUJIAN AND GUANGDONG MURAKAMI Ei Introduction The Opium War came to a close on July 24, 1842 with the signing of the Treaty of Nanjing. There had arisen, however, during the conflict pirate bands mainly Fujianese and Cantonese-who became a great menace to the trade origi nating in the new treaty ports, which had been established after the treaty. Few scholars, however, had been concerned with the problems brought about by the pirates at these treaty ports. Therefore, fewer studies have been con ducted on the pirates of the time as compared with those of the late-Ming to early-Qing period (Wokou and Zheng family) or those of the Jiaqing era. The first study on the pirates of this period was conducted by Grace Fox, who stressed the suppression of the pirates by the British Royal Navy.l Later, John K. Fairbank in his famous study of the age following the opening of the treaty ports discussed in detail the pirates around Ningpo as an example of the turmoil in the coastal area during the period. -
Tributary Activities of Vietnam and Korea with China: Similarities and Differences*
International Journal of Korean History (Vol.26 No.1, Feb. 2021) 117 * Tributary Activities of Vietnam and Korea with China: Similarities and Differences* Nguyen Thi My Hanh** Although Korea is in Northeast Asia and Vietnam is in Southeast Asia, due to similarities in historical circumstances and being deeply influenced by Chinese civilization, the two countries share many similarities. Fore- most among these similarities is the diplomatic aspect, which most clearly reflects the close relationship between geopolitics and behavior with the outside world. If East Asian modern history (including Vietnam and Ko- rea) is the history of relations with the West, then East Asian premodern history is the history of relations with China. Therefore, comparing the Chinese tributary activities of Korea with the diplomacy of Vietnam in the medieval period not only shows similarities and differences in diplo- macy between the two countries but also helps to determine the position and behavior of Vietnam and Korea with China as the center of the East Asian regional order at that time. * This research is funded by the Vietnam National Foundation for Science and Tech- nology Development (NAFOSTED) under grant number 601.01-2019.01 ** Hanoi National University of Education, 136 Xuan Thuy Street, Cau Giay District, Hanoi, Vietnam, [email protected] 118 Tributary Activities of Vietnam and Korea with China Research Content In Vietnam, the earliest document about Korea is the Bắc sử thông lục (Complete History of the North) written by the Vietnamese historian Le Quy Don who lived in the eighteenth century. In this book, Korea was referred to as “the Eastern Country” 东 国 or “the country in the East.” Later, in another book called Kiến văn tiểu lục (Picking up what eyes see and ears hear) by Le Quy Don, Korea was mentioned many times by the name Cao Ly country. -
Transferring Technology to China a Publication of the Institute of East Asian Studies University of California Berkeley, California 94720
Transferring Technology to China A publication of the Institute of East Asian Studies University of California Berkeley, California 94720 The China Research Monograph series is one of several publications series sponsored by the Institute of East Asian Studies in conjunction with its three constituent units—the Center for Chinese Studies, the Center for Japanese Studies, and the Center for Korean Studies. The others include the Korea Research Monograph series, the Japan Research Monograph series, and the Research Papers and Policy Studies series. The Institute sponsors also a Faculty Reprint series. Correspondence may be sent to: Publications Office Institute of East Asian Studies University of California Berkeley, California 94720 CHINA RESEARCH MONOGRAPH 28 INSTITUTE OF EAST ASIAN STUDIES UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA • BERKELEY CENTER FOR CHINESE STUDIES Transferring Technology to China Prosper Giquel and the Self-strengthening Movement Steven A. Leibo Although the Institute of East Asian Studies is responsible for the selection and acceptance of manuscripts in this series, responsibility for the opinions expressed and for the accuracy of statements rests with their authors. Copyright ® 1985 by the Regents of the University of California ISBN 0-912966-76-9 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 85-60380 Printed in the United States of America Contents Foreword vii Acknowledgments. ix Portrait ofProsper Giquel. xii Introduction 1 I. The Making of a China Hand 6 II. The Ever-Triumphant Army 26 III. Sojourn in France and the End of the Taiping Kingdom 41 IV. Prosper Giquel and the Origins of the Fuzhou Dockyard; 1840-1867 61 V. Directing the Fuzhou Dockyard 88 VI. -
Red Tourism in China
9. __________________________________________________________ Red Tourism in China Yoko Takayama Introduction Currently, Red Tourism in China is a subject that continues to fascinate scholars in a variety of disciplines. Although some consider it to be just a pursuit for popular amusement, Red Tourism is in fact better described as a tourism built on political pilgrimage, which emphasises the visiting of national sacred places, such as the birthplaces and residences of past communist leaders, ‘glorious’ battlefields, and revolutionary martyrs’ cemeteries and memorials, in order to learn revolutionary history and to boost the national prestige of socialist countries. This type of tourism can be traced back to the founding of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) in 1949, when people began to make pilgrimages to sacred places in order to retrace the Long March, a 12,500-kilometre-long trek. It was especially important for younger people who were born around 1949 to have this vicarious experience of the Long March to ensure that they acquired a proper appreciation of the revolutionary spirit. Most of this generation readily adopted asceticism as a means of embracing their revolutionary heritage.1 Mao Tourism is another example of a type of political pilgrimage. After a revolutionary memorial was established in 1953 in Mao’s hometown of Shaoshan, located in Hunan Province, it gradually grew to become a popular revolutionary sacred place for the new nation. A few hundred thousand people visited Shaoshan between 1953 and 1964. During the Cultural Revolution, thousands had turned into millions when the projected persona of Mao Zedong changed drastically from that of Chinese Communist Party (CCP) leader to a near God of the PRC. -
Modern Transformation of Nianhua in Suzhou-Shanghai
Western University Scholarship@Western Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository 11-30-2015 12:00 AM Cityscape, Urban Nobodies and War: Modern Transformation of Nianhua in Suzhou-Shanghai Hua Huang The University of Western Ontario Supervisor James A. Flath The University of Western Ontario Graduate Program in History A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the equirr ements for the degree in Doctor of Philosophy © Hua Huang 2015 Follow this and additional works at: https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/etd Part of the Asian History Commons, Chinese Studies Commons, and the Cultural History Commons Recommended Citation Huang, Hua, "Cityscape, Urban Nobodies and War: Modern Transformation of Nianhua in Suzhou- Shanghai" (2015). Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository. 3385. https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/etd/3385 This Dissertation/Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by Scholarship@Western. It has been accepted for inclusion in Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository by an authorized administrator of Scholarship@Western. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Cityscapes, Urban Nobodies and War: Modern Transformation of Nianhua in Suzhou-Shanghai, 1730s-1900s (Thesis format: Monograph) by Hua Huang Graduate Program in History A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy The School of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies The University of Western Ontario London, Ontario, Canada © Hua Huang 2015 Abstract This dissertation explores the continuities and ruptures of the nianhua practice and representations in the Suzhou-Shanghai region during the mid-18th – 19th century. It explores a city-based nianhua tradition in Jiangnan’s urban centers that supplements current scholarship, which focuses geographically on northern print centers, economically on village-based production, and thematically on religious, auspicious and moral subjects of universal value. -
Rebellion and Rule Under Consular Optics: Changing Ways of Seeing the China-Vietnam Borderlands, 1874–1879
Rebellion and Rule under Consular Optics: Changing Ways of Seeing the China-Vietnam Borderlands, 1874–1879 Bradley Camp Davis, Eastern Connecticut State University Abstract This article contributes to the continuing discussion concerning the changing relationships between China and its neighbors in the nineteenth century. Focusing on Vietnam, a country within the metaphorical framework of the “tribute system,” it analyzes the complex range of relationships in the borderlands during the 1870s. Following the establishment of French consular offices in northern Vietnam, rebellions, counterinsurgency, communities, and commerce in the borderlands fell under a new kind of official gaze, one that ultimately provided self-serving justification to advocates of French imperialism in Southeast Asia. As emblems of foreign influence, French consulates soon became elements in factional struggles that unfolded within the Vietnamese bureaucracy over the role of China in Vietnam, the employment of surrendered bandits as officials, and borderlands administration. Keywords: borderlands, frontiers, French imperialism, rebellion, Nguyễn Vietnam, French Indochina, Qing Empire, Li Yangcai, Alexandre de Kergaradec, Black Flags, Liu Yongfu, Yellow Flags, Hoàng Kế Viêm Introduction In the final week of October 1879, Li Yangcai was decapitated in China. A former military officer who rebelled against his commanders, Li had proclaimed himself the previous year a direct descendant of the founder of the Vietnamese Lý dynasty (1009–1225). Beginning in the China-Vietnam borderlands, he launched a rebellion that spread as far south as Thái Nguyên and Bắc Ninh, just north of Hanoi (figure 1). Upon his arrest in 1879, Li Yangcai was brought back to southern China and executed. His severed head, however, was returned to northern Vietnam. -
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