New Chinese Military History, 1839–1951: What’s the Story?

Charles W. Hayford

Front. Hist. China ›› 2018, Vol. 13 ›› Issue (1) : 90 -126.

PDF (435KB)
Front. Hist. China ›› 2018, Vol. 13 ›› Issue (1) : 90 -126. DOI: 10.3868/s020-007-018-0006-0
Orginal Article
Orginal Article

New Chinese Military History, 1839–1951: What’s the Story?

Author information +
History +
PDF (435KB)

Abstract

Since 1990, New Chinese Military History in the West has remedied scholarly neglect of Chinese warfare and changed the usual stories of modern China. These studies disproved Orientalist assumptions of a unique “Chinese way of war” or a strategic culture that avoided aggressive confrontation. Scholars also challenge the assumption that Confucian immobility led to a clash of civilizations and decisive defeat in the Opium Wars, First Sino-Japanese War, and Boxer War of 1900. In fact, Qing officials were quick and successful in creating a new military regime. New military histories of the warlords, the Sino-Japanese Wars, and the Chinese Civil War show that developing new types of warfare was central in creating the new nation. All these wars split the country into factions that were supported by outside powers: they were internationalized civil wars. The article also asks how the choice of terms, labels, and categories shapes interpretations and political messages.

Keywords

historiography / New Military History / New Chinese Military History / war / warfare / Opium Wars / Taiping Rebellion / Boxer Uprising / Sino-Japanese War / War of Resistance / World War Two in Asia

Cite this article

Download citation ▾
Charles W. Hayford. New Chinese Military History, 1839–1951: What’s the Story?. Front. Hist. China, 2018, 13(1): 90-126 DOI:10.3868/s020-007-018-0006-0

登录浏览全文

4963

注册一个新账户 忘记密码

References

RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS

Higher Education Press and Brill

AI Summary AI Mindmap
PDF (435KB)

1383

Accesses

0

Citation

Detail

Sections
Recommended

AI思维导图

/