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Chinese Law in Imperial Eyes - Sovereignty, Justice, and Transcultural Politics (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,103
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Chinese Law in Imperial Eyes - Sovereignty, Justice, and Transcultural Politics (Hardcover)
Series: Studies of the Weatherhead East Asian Institute, Columbia University
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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How did American schoolchildren, French philosophers, Russian
Sinologists, Dutch merchants, and British lawyers imagine China and
Chinese law? What happened when agents of presumably dominant
Western empires had to endure the humiliations and anxieties of
maintaining a profitable but precarious relationship with China? In
Chinese Law in Imperial Eyes, Li Chen provides a richly textured
analysis of these related issues and their intersection with law,
culture, and politics in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
Using a wide array of sources, Chen's study focuses on the power
dynamics of Sino-Western relations during the formative century
before the First Opium War (1839-1842). He highlights the
centrality of law to modern imperial ideology and politics and
brings new insight to the origins of comparative Chinese law in the
West, the First Opium War, and foreign extraterritoriality in
China. The shifting balance of economic and political power formed
and transformed knowledge of China and Chinese law in different
contact zones. Chen argues that recovering the variegated and
contradictory roles of Chinese law in Western "modernization" helps
provincialize the subsequent Euro-Americentric discourse of global
modernity. Chen draws attention to important yet underanalyzed
sites in which imperial sovereignty, national identity, cultural
tradition, or international law and order were defined and
restructured. His valuable case studies show how constructed
differences between societies were hardened into cultural or racial
boundaries and then politicized to rationalize international
conflicts and hierarchy.
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