Sowing the seeds of change : Chinese students, Japanese teachers, 1895-1905

Title
  1. Sowing the seeds of change : Chinese students, Japanese teachers, 1895-1905 / Paula Harrell.
Published by
  1. Stanford, Calif. : Stanford University Press, 1992.
Author
  1. Harrell, Paula, 1939-

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StatusFormatTextAccessUse in libraryCall numberLB1696.6.C6 H37 1992Item locationOff-site

Details

Description
  1. 289 pages, 12 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations; 24 cm.
Summary
  1. "In the critical decade between the Sino-Japanese and Russo-Japanese wars, perhaps as many as 10,000 Chinese students converged on Tokyo in what was the first large study-abroad movement anywhere in the world." "Following China's defeat by Japan in 1895, sending young Chinese to Japan for schooling seemed wise policy to leaders in both countries. To reform-minded pragmatists at the helm of Ch'ing government, study in Japan meant access to modern ideas and technology that would strengthen the state and their own power. To Japan's leaders, training thousands of young Chinese fit their objective of creating a strong China under Japanese tutelage; together, the two countries could form an Asian bulwark against the encroachments of the West. But this blueprint for study abroad failed to consider what the students' own goals might be for a modernizing China." "For the Chinese students, exposure to an economically stronger, intellectually more open Japan inspired visions of a new China, free of Ch'ing mismanagement, more broadly representative politically, and capable of holding back imperialism in any form, Western or Japanese. Increasingly alienated from the Ch'ing state, Japan-educated activists boldly proclaimed their anti-authoritarian views and were a key force in the rising tide of dissidence propelling China to revolution in 1911."
  2. "Among the topics the author considers are the emergence of official and popular support for study in Japan, the socio-economic background of the students, their psychological interaction with the Japanese, case studies of student protest movements, and the nature of students' intellectual and political concerns. In developing a new political outlook, the students grappled with many of the issues confronting China nearly a century later: how far to open the door to Western influence, how to relate to an economically strong Japan, how much political reform should accompany technological and economic change, and, above all, how to become modern and remain distinctively Chinese."--Jacket.
Series statement
  1. Studies of the East Asian Institute, Columbia University
Uniform title
  1. Studies of the East Asian Institute.
Subject
  1. Honʼyaku iin shachū Japan
  2. Geschichte 1895-1905
  3. Foreign study > China > History
  4. Chinese students > Japan > History
  5. Student movements > China > History
  6. Education > Political aspects > History. > China
  7. 15.75 history of Asia
  8. Chinese students
  9. Education > Political aspects
  10. Foreign study
  11. Student movements
  12. Auslandsstudium
  13. Chinesen
  14. Studentenbeweging
  15. Étudiants chinois > Japon > Histoire > 1870-1914
  16. Politique et éducation > Chine > Histoire > 1870-1914
  17. Mouvements étudiants > Chine > Histoire > 1870-1914
  18. Études à l'étranger > Chine > Histoire
  19. Étudiants chinois > Japon > Histoire
  20. Mouvements étudiants > Chine > Histoire
  21. Politique et éducation > Chine > Histoire
  22. China
  23. Japan
  24. Japan
  25. Chinesen
Genre/Form
  1. History.
Contents
  1. 1. Origins of the Study-in-Japan Program -- 2. Study Tours for Chinese Officials -- 3. Student Encounter with Japan -- 4. Beginnings of Student Activism -- 5. Seijo School Incident, 1902 -- 6. Rise of Anti-Imperialism, 1903 -- 7. Formation of Revolutionary Groups, 1903-1905 -- 8. Climax of Student Protest, 1905 -- 9. Student Political Awakening, 1900-1905.
Owning institution
  1. Princeton University Library
Bibliography (note)
  1. Includes bibliographical references and index.