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China’s Response to the Challenges from the West 1840-1949. Session 3. Table of Contents. I. The Self-Strengthening Movement from 1860s to 1890s ( 自强运动) II. Political Reform in 1898 & Revolution in 1911 (百日维新与辛亥革命) III. The New Cultural Movement from 1919 to 1923 (新文化运动) IV. Discussion.
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China’s Response to the Challenges from the West 1840-1949 Session 3
Table of Contents I. The Self-Strengthening Movement from 1860s to 1890s (自强运动) II. Political Reform in 1898 & Revolution in 1911(百日维新与辛亥革命) III. The New Cultural Movement from 1919 to 1923 (新文化运动) IV. Discussion
I. The Self-Strengthening Movement (自强运动)I-1. New Understanding of the West • “A total unprecedented situation in its three thousand years of history-三千年未有之变局,三千年未有之强敌!”Li Hongzhang (李鸿章,1823-1901) • A Gazetteer of Four Countries (四国志) Lin Zexu (林则徐) • Illustrated Treatise on the Maritime Kingdoms (海國圖志)Wei Yuan (魏源,1794-1856) history, geography, and politics; military strength; industries; and methods of dealing with the West.“Learn the superior techniques of the barbarians to control the barbarians.” • “Chinese learning for foundation, Western learning for practical application-中学为体,西学为用。” Zhang Zhidong (张之洞)
I-2. First Period from 1861-1872 • Train technical and diplomatic personnel • Zongli Yamen 总理衙门(Office of Foreign Affairs) in 1861 • Translation College (同文馆)in 1862 • Dispatch students abroad (120 boys went to America) 1872-1881 • Adopt Western firearms, machines, scientific knowledge • A small gun factory at Suzhou in 1864 • Jiangnan Arsenal in Shanghai in 1865 • Fuzhou Dockyard in 1866 • Tianjing Marchine Factory in 1870
I-3. Second Period from 1872-1885 • Profit-oriented enterprises such as shipping, railways, mining and the telegraph • China’s Merchants’ Steam navigation Company in 1872 • Kaiping Cola Mines in 1887 • Suzhou Machine Factory in 1887 • A textile factory in 1878 • Shanghai Cotton Cloth Mill in 1878 • First telegraphy line from Daku to Tianjing in 1879 • A Naval Academy in Tianjing in 1880 • Imperial Telegraphy Administration (Shanghai-Tianjing) in 1880 • A harbor and shipyard in Daliang in 1882 • Students to Britain, France and Germany to learn shipbuilding, and navigation in 1884
d phase from 1885 to 1895: I-4. Third Period from 1885-1895 • Focus on light industries • A textile mill in Shanghai in 1886 • Mints factory in 1887 • Mohe Cold Mines in 1887 • Beiyang Fleet (北洋水师)in 1888 • A cotton mill and an iron factory in Guangzhou in 1889 • A Shanghai paper mill in 1891 • Four cotton and textile plants in 1893 • Two match companies and Hubei Textile Company in 1894
I-5. Progress and Limitation The Self-Strengthening Movement marked the beginning of industrialization and sowed the seeds of modern capitalism Metropolises such as Shanghai, Nanjing, Tianjing First group of professionals such as engineers, managers and birth of the working class Limitation: Its imitation of western armament, technology and diplomacy was a superficial gesture toward modernization. The finer aspects of western civilization-political institutions,, social theories, philosophy, fine arts and music went total untouched.
1-6. Failure of the Self-Strengthening Movement The Sino-Japanese War from 1894-95 • The Beiyang Fleet was totally destroyed • The Treaty of Shimonoseki was signed on April 17, 1895 1) Recognition of Korean independence and termination of tribute to China 2) An indemnity of 200 million taels to Japan 3) Cession of Taiwang, the Pescadores and the Liangdong peninsula 4) The opening of Chongqing, Suzhou, Hangzhou, and Shashi 5) The right of Japanese nationals to open factories in China
I-7. Factors Lead to the Failure of the Sino-Japanese War • Li’s only army vs. the might of whole Japan • Nanyang Fleet stood by during the battles • Dowager Cixi misused the naval fund for her own pleasure to build the Summer Palace • Two most advanced warships including the Yoshino were purchased by Japan • Corruption and poor training of Li’s own army • Miscalculation of Li’ diplomatic action • Limitation of the Self-Strengthening Movement
II. Political Institutional Transformation (1898-1912) New thinking: it is far from enough only to learn western technology and industry. China needs to make political changes. A top-down political reform under Emperor Guangxu (光绪): 100-Day Reform (6/11-9/21, 1898) “The New Deal” - to transform an absolute monarchy to a constitutional monarchy Key person in the political reform: Kang Youwei (康有为) Liagng Qichao (梁启超)
I-1. New Deal • Education • Replacement of the eight-legged essay by essays on current affairs • Establishment of modern schools • Political Administration • Abolition of unnecessary offices • Appointment of the progressives in government • Improvement of administrative efficiency • Industry • Promotion of railroad construction • Promotion of agricultural, industrial and commercial development • Others • Tour of foreign countries by high officials • Protection of missionaries
Failure of the Reform • A coup took place and put Emperor in house arrest • Causes and effects of the failure • Reformers vs. whole Confucian state and society • Dowager and her followers • All the scholars • Government officials whose offices were abolished • Manchu Bannermen and Chinese Standard Army • Consequence: Han people were determined to overthrow the rule of the Manchus
IV. Conclusion Facing the Challenges from the West after 1840, Chinese civilization declined significantly. In order to avoid the fate of destruction, Chinese people made radical changes in the following three stages: • The Strengthening Movement • The Political institutional transformation • The New Cultural Revolution
II-2. Sun Yah-sen’s Revolution in 1911 • Overthrow Manchurian Rule internally and drive imperialist powers externally • Three People’s Principles 1)People’s National Consciousness / Nationalism 2)People’s Rights / Democracy 3)People’s Livelihood / Socialism Results: 1) Republic of China was established in 1912 2) War-lords competition and chaos followed
III. The New Cultural Movement from 1917 to 1923 • “Down with Confucianism” • “Welcome Mr. Democracy and Mr. Science” - Chen Duxiu (陈独秀) • John Dewey vs. Bertrand Russel • Liberalism vs. Socialism
Discussion • What are the motivations of the Self-Strengthening Movement? • Why did Emperor Guangxu want to have a political reform? • What are differences between the One Hundred Day reform and Sun’s revolution? • What are the differences between China’s responses to the West in these three steps? • What are the consequences of China’s criticism of Confucianism and worship of Western democracy and science?
Thank you! Questions?