Skip to content
Skip to product information
1 of 1

WULOLIFE

"Searching for Modern China" (Three Books) Author: Jonathan Spence Publisher: Times Publishing

Sale Sold out
Regular price €89,00
Regular price Sale price €89,00
Tax included. Shipping calculated at checkout.

Description

Contents

To understand China today, you must understand its past!
From the fall of the late Ming Dynasty to modern China's desire to dominate the world situation,
Using politics as the main thread and economics as the secondary thread, Jingyuan Shih has woven a new generation of Chinese history that is both grand and objective!

Let’s step out of the historical perspectives we are familiar with and re-examine from the perspective of others – how China became China!

After Kangxi and Cao Yin, Changing China, Kangxi, and Tiananmen, the master of Ming and Qing history, Stephen Spence wrote In Search of Modern China to help Western students understand the complex modern Chinese history in a more systematic way. With its vivid descriptions and beautiful writing, it has not only successfully become an introductory book for Westerners to understand Chinese history, but has also become a classic masterpiece for Chinese people to understand contemporary China.

The first volume looks at how the land tax system of the Ming Dynasty affected people's livelihood from the fall of the dynasty to the end of the Qing Dynasty. The evolution of mainstream doctrines, from Neo-Confucianism and textual criticism to "Chinese learning as the basis and Western learning as the application", can influence the selection of talents by the court and even lead to the rise and fall of the country. After experiencing border troubles and civil unrest, the international powers landed in force, the situation became more dangerous and complicated, and internal and external troubles continued, which eventually led to the collapse of the Qing Empire and the establishment of the Republic. Personal ambitions and national interests, and the balance of power between local and central governments have been bothering China in various forms since the late Ming Dynasty, and have not been resolved to this day.

The middle volume starts with the decline of the Qing Empire, goes through the turbulent Republic of China, and ends with the civil war between the Kuomintang and the Communist Party. In Spence's writing, Chinese intellectuals finally woke up from their dream of a Celestial Empire and began to think about how to connect with the Western world, learn from Western theories, and rebuild the ideal map of great unification. From Yuan Shikai to Chiang Kai-shek and Mao Zedong, the transition and struggle of power never stopped; the Kuomintang and the Communist Party struggled on the lines of capitalism and socialism; however, the international powers were also eyeing them, trying to influence the development of power in order to gain greater benefits. At this time, China was like a huge dead beast, with only the corpse still trembling. The awakening and resistance of the grassroots people reflects the weakness and corruption of the ruling political system in terms of economy and class. Faced with the various chronic diseases of the country, the casualties and chaos of the transfer of power, and the loss of ideological support, who will gather the anger of the land and the people? Where will China go?

The second volume begins with the KMT-CCP ​​split and the Korean War in 1949, and ends with the revival of Neo-Confucianism in Chinese politics, showing the evolution of Chinese politics, economy, and diplomacy over the past seventy years. In this volume, Jonathan Spence writes that from the late Ming Dynasty to the present, there has always been a lack of peaceful transfer of power in China. This happened to scholars in the late Ming Dynasty, the late Qing Dynasty reform, and the early Republic of China. It has continued to happen in China after 1949. When Mao Zedong, Zhou Enlai, Hua Guofeng, Deng Xiaoping, Hu Yaobang, and Zhao Ziyang confronted each other for power, behind the scenes, generations of scholars and common people were trying to fight for democracy from the cracks of totalitarianism in a confined and conservative atmosphere and shed blood and sacrificed their lives. Tiananmen Square in front of the Imperial City has witnessed the revolutionary spirit of several generations, the endless open and covert struggles over the past century, and the people's desire for national prosperity.

When Jonathan Spence wrote The Search for Modern China at the end of the last century, it was just before the June 4th Tiananmen Square Incident, and his focus was on a closed China. At that time, China was no different from the late Ming Dynasty, in urgent need of internal reform and in turmoil. Leaders all consolidated their power in the name of truth and restricted the people's lofty ambitions in various fields. Although economic reforms brought hope for enlightenment, every reform also triggered bloody repression to consolidate power, and this cycle repeated again and again. For Jonathan Spence, if China wants to create its own path and if the West wants to understand China, especially why the East and the West have taken different paths in modernization after the Great Divergence, they cannot avoid how China was formed from the late Ming Dynasty to the modern era. This is the origin of the first edition of The Search for Modern China.

The third edition in 2013 not only expanded the timeline to the "Hu-Wen system" of Hu Jintao and Wen Jiabao, but also significantly increased the amount of money and economic details based on the economic orientation in recent years; and the use of "liberalism" and "democracy" by various regimes to consolidate power has never disappeared in the third edition. Looking back at "In Search of Modern China", readers will find that this book is not only an entry-level classic for the West to understand China's modern and contemporary history, but also makes up for the lack of neutrality of cross-strait history books with clear positions and unequal information.


 

About the Author

About the Author

Jonathan D. Spence


Born in England in 1936, he is an internationally renowned expert on modern Chinese history. He taught at the Department of History at Yale University in the United States from 1965 until his retirement in 2008. He has written many books, including "In Search of Modern China", "The Yongzheng Dynasty: The Lost Way of Righteousness", "The Taiping Heavenly Kingdom", "Changing China", "Kangxi", "Tiananmen", "Cao Yin and Kangxi", "Hu Ruowang's Questions" (all published by China Times Publishing), "The Khanate: China in the Eyes of the West" (Business), "The Death of Lady Wang" (Wheat Field), and "Richard Ricci's Palace of Memory" (Wheat Field).

Translator Profile

Wen Qiayi (Second Edition)


He holds a PhD from the Department of East Asian Studies at National Chengchi University and currently teaches at Shih Hsin University. He is the author of A Gift to the Emperor: The Wedgwood Porcelain Kingdom and the Long Eighteenth Century, and has translated books such as The Yongzheng Dynasty: The Lost Purpose (co-translated), Changing China, Kangxi: Reconstructing the Inner World of a Chinese Emperor, Tiananmen: Chinese Intellectuals and Revolution, Dreams of the Past Dynasty: Zhang Dai's Splendor and Desolation, Kangxi and Cao Yin, Marie-Claire Bergère's The Biography of Sun Yat-sen, and Maurice Meisner's The Birth of Maoism: The Road to Chinese Communist Revolution.

Meng Lingwei (Third Edition)

Graduated from the Department of History of National Taiwan Normal University, currently studying for a master's degree in translation at National Taiwan University, translated "Life on the Border: Refugees and Immigrants in Europe" (Southern Home). I have a wide range of interests, but I think but don't learn, and I am a rat in the woods with few skills. I hope to witness Taiwan's independence and heavy motorcycles on the national highway before I die.

Email: bmwnmeng@gmail.com

Chen Rongbin (Third Edition)

Assistant professor of the Master of Translation Program at National Taiwan University. He has won the "Openbook Top Ten Translation Books" award three times. His recent work "Insects" was selected as the 2018 Openbook Book of the Year (Translation). He has published more than 50 translations of various types. His representative works in recent years include Hemingway's classic novels "Moby Dick", "For Whom the Bell Tolls", "The Gunpowder Age" and "A History of Chinese Americans". His book "Dangerous Friendship: Super-Translation of Fitzgerald and Hemingway" and his translation of Fitzgerald's first novel "Paradise on Earth" were both published by Southern Home. He served as a judge for the 41st Golden Tripod Awards.
 

contents

Preface to the Third Edition Preface to the Third Edition by Chen Rongbin Preface to the Second Edition by Xu Zhuoyun Preface to the First Edition by Chen Guodong

Volume 1. The Last Dynasty

Part I│Conquest and Consolidation<br data-mce-fragment="1">Chapter 1 Late Ming DynastyChapter 2 Qing Dynasty ConquestChapter 3 Consolidation of Kangxi's RegimeChapter 4 Yongzheng's AuthorityChapter 5 Chinese Society and Qianlong's RegimeChapter 6 China and Eighteenth-Century Society

Part II│Division and Reform <br data-mce-fragment="1">Chapter 7 The First Clash with the West Chapter 8 Internal Crisis Chapter 9 The Reform of the Restoration Chapter 10 New Tensions in the Late Qing Dynasty Chapter 11 The Overthrow of the Qing Dynasty

Volume 2: Revolution and War

Part III│Prospects for the Nation and Society
<br data-mce-fragment="1">Chapter 12: The Founding of the RepublicChapter 13: "It Became a Road"
Chapter 14: The Collapse of the Alliance Chapter 15: The Kuomintang Comes to Power Chapter 16: The Survival of the Communist Party

Part 4│War and Revolution <br data-mce-fragment="1">Chapter 17: World War II Chapter 18: The Collapse of the Kuomintang

Volume 2: From Communism to Market Economy

Chapter 19: The Building of the People's Republic Chapter 20: Planning for a New Society Chapter 21: Deepening the Revolution Chapter 22: The Cultural Revolution

Part Five│Living in the World <br data-mce-fragment="1">Chapter 23 Reopening the DoorChapter 24 Redefining RevolutionChapter 25 Circles of PowerChapter 26 Exploring BoundariesChapter 27 The End of the CenturyChapter 28 Breakthrough?
Your cart