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Vernacular Industrialism in China - Local Innovation and Translated Technologies in the Making of a Cosmetics Empire, 1900-1940 (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,341
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Vernacular Industrialism in China - Local Innovation and Translated Technologies in the Making of a Cosmetics Empire, 1900-1940 (Hardcover)
Series: Studies of the Weatherhead East Asian Institute, Columbia University
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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In early twentieth-century China, Chen Diexian (1879-1940) was a
maverick entrepreneur-at once a prolific man of letters and captain
of industry, a magazine editor and cosmetics magnate. He tinkered
with chemistry in his private studio, used local cuttlefish to
source magnesium carbonate, and published manufacturing tips in
how-to columns. In a rapidly changing society, Chen copied foreign
technologies and translated manufacturing processes from abroad to
produce adaptations of global commodities that bested foreign
brands. Engaging in the worlds of journalism, industry, and
commerce, he drew on literati practices associated with
late-imperial elites but deployed them in novel ways within a
culture of educated tinkering that generated industrial innovation.
Through the lens of Chen's career, Eugenia Lean explores how
unlikely individuals devised unconventional, homegrown approaches
to industry and science in early twentieth-century China. She
contends that Chen's activities exemplify "vernacular
industrialism," the pursuit of industry and science outside of
conventional venues, often involving ad hoc forms of knowledge and
material work. Lean shows how vernacular industrialists accessed
worldwide circuits of law and science and experimented with local
and global processes of manufacturing to navigate, innovate, and
compete in global capitalism. In doing so, they presaged the
approach that has helped fuel China's economic ascent in the
twenty-first century. Rather than conventional narratives that
depict China as belatedly borrowing from Western technology,
Vernacular Industrialism in China offers a new understanding of
industrialization, going beyond material factors to show the
central role of culture and knowledge production in technological
and industrial change.
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