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ISBN: PB: 9781849044882

Hurst Publishers

August 2015

256 pp.

21.6x13.8 cm

PB:
£16,99
QTY:

Categories:

Discourse of Race in Modern China

For sale in CIS only!

First published in 1992, "The Discourse of Race in Modern China" rapidly became a classic, showing for the first time on the basis of detailed evidence how and why racial categorisation became so widespread in China. After the country's devastating defeat against Japan in 1895, leading reformers like Yan Fu, Liang Qichao and Kang Youwei turned away from the Confucian classics to seek enlightenment abroad, hoping to find the keys to wealth and power on the distant shores of Europe. Instead, they discovered the notion of "race", and used new evolutionary theories from Charles Darwin and Herbert Spencer to present a universe red in tooth and claw in which "yellows" competed with "whites" in a deadly struggle for survival. After the fall of the empire in 1911, prominent politicians and writers in republican China continued to measure, classify and rank people from around the world according to their supposed biological features, all in the name of science. Racial thinking remains popular in the People's Republic of China, as serologists, geneticists and anthropometrists continue to interpret human variation in terms of "race". This new edition has been revised and expanded to include a new chapter taking the reader up to the twenty-first century.

About the Author

Frank Dikotter is Chair Professor of Humanities at the University of Hong Kong. Before moving to Asia in 2006, he was Professor of the Modern History of China at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. He has published nine books about the history of China, including two international bestsellers, "Mao's Great Famine", which won the BBC Samuel Johnson Prize for Non-fiction in 2011, and "The Tragedy of Liberation: A History of the Chinese Revolution, 1945-1957".