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Railway imperialism in China charts the political genealogy of railways from their introduction in the heyday of railway imperialism to their transformation into a tool for both Chinese nation making and furthering China's global ambitions. It systematically scrutinizes the intense rivalry among foreign powers that accompanied its introduction and development. Though dismissed by generations of historians as Confucian conservatism, the late Qing's resistance to railways directs us to what are now considered legitimate reasons: their desire to protect the environment and existing socio-economic order. This book advances a model in the study of railway imperialism, synthesizing how and why railways had become the preferred instrument for empire-making. Treaties had confined foreign powers to a "settlement" in port cities, but railways allowed them to penetrate into the interior, to station troops, to extract resources, and to construct stations which could grow into colonies. More importantly, the book considers both the immediate and long-term legacies of railway imperialism where the CCP has been the ultimate beneficiary. They inherited not just lines built by imperial powers but also their technology and an unfinished vision, which the post-Mao regime has taken further, using railways to conquer the world through the BRI. This book exploits brand new archival sources and sheds new light on Western and Japanese expansion into and rivalry in the late Qing, and more importantly China's transformation from a victim of railway imperialism to a railway expansionist.
Reviews
Railway imperialism in China charts the political genealogy of railways from their introduction in the heyday of railway imperialism to their transformation into a tool for both Chinese nation making and furthering China's global ambitions. It systematically scrutinizes the intense rivalry among foreign powers that accompanied its introduction and development. Though dismissed by generations of historians as Confucian conservatism, the late Qing's resistance to railways directs us to what are now considered legitimate reasons: their desire to protect the environment and existing socio-economic order. This book advances a model in the study of railway imperialism, synthesizing how and why railways had become the preferred instrument for empire-making. Treaties had confined foreign powers to a "settlement" in port cities, but railways allowed them to penetrate into the interior, to station troops, to extract resources, and to construct stations which could grow into colonies. More importantly, the book considers both the immediate and long-term legacies of railway imperialism where the CCP has been the ultimate beneficiary. They inherited not just lines built by imperial powers but also their technology and an unfinished vision, which the post-Mao regime has taken further, using railways to conquer the world through the BRI. This book exploits brand new archival sources and sheds new light on Western and Japanese expansion into and rivalry in the late Qing, and more importantly China's transformation from a victim of railway imperialism to a railway expansionist.
Author Biography
Zheng Yangwen is Professor of Chinese History at the University of Manchester
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press is a leading UK publisher known for excellent research in the humanities and social sciences.
View all titlesBibliographic Information
- Publisher Manchester University Press
- Publication Date March 2026
- Orginal LanguageEnglish
- ISBN/Identifier 9781526195258 / 1526195259
- Publication Country or regionUnited Kingdom
- FormatPrint PDF
- Pages328
- ReadershipGeneral/trade; College/higher education; Professional and scholarly
- Publish StatusPublished
- Dimensions234 X 156 mm
- SeriesStudies in Imperialism
- Reference Code18261
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