The Age of Openness

The Age of Openness: China Before Mao is a 2008 book by historian Frank Dikötter. It provides an account of the Republican era of Chinese history, spanning from the early 20th century to the Communist Party takeover in 1949. In it, Dikötter describes a period of unprecedented openness during which China was actively pursuing engagement with the world, as evidenced by what Dikötter described as a pluralistic intellectual environment, thriving open markets and economic growth, and expanded liberties and rule of law.[1]

The Age of Openness: China Before Mao
AuthorFrank Dikötter
LanguageEnglish
GenreHistory
PublisherUniversity of Hong Kong Press (paperback)
Publication date
15 July 2008
Pages140
ISBN978-0-520-25881-5

Content

In the book, Dikötter challenged conventional historical narratives on China during the Republican period, an era that has traditionally been represented as a catastrophic time marred by famine, invasions, civil war and instability, the backwardness of which was only corrected with the triumph of the Communists in 1949.[2] As Bradley Winterton of the Taipei Times wrote, Dikötter presents evidence that China during this era was, "for a time at least, more democratic than many comparable countries in Europe (and almost everywhere else in Asia), less militarized per head of the population than might be supposed, with considerable stability and continuity in local government even if the central government was weak, and with a remarkably international perspective."[3]

While Dikötter does not deny the devastation caused by the Chinese Civil War or the Japanese invasion, he nonetheless argues that the Republican period was a "golden age of openness" in which the country was making substantial progress toward modernity, boldly experimenting with ideas and market reforms, and building vast infrastructure projects.[2]

Reception

Historian Jonathan Spence wrote that The Age of Openness "presents a cornucopia of graphic examples to show that China in the first half of the twentieth century, far from being in a state of decay that called for revolutionary action, was in fact a vibrant and cosmopolitan society. In such a reading, the current Chinese leaders should not be seen as striving to do something bold and new; they are merely struggling to rebuild a network of global connections that Mao and others had systematically helped to destroy.[1]

Andrew J. Nathan, professor of political science at Columbia University, wrote that Dikötter's book "infuses new life into an historical period left by most historians for dead—China's republican era from 1912 to 1949. In his persuasive recounting, this cosmopolitan, dynamic era has more to tell us about modern China's long-term trajectory than the authoritarian interlude that followed it."[1]

Journalist Jonathan Fenby argues that while Dikötter sometimes built his cases on fragile foundations, he nevertheless "marshals a good case that China in this period was much more vibrant, innovative and open than has been generally supposed."[4]

See also

References

  1. University of California Press, Description, The Age of Openness: China Before Mao.
  2. Kerry Brown, 'Review: The Age of Openness', Asian Review of Books, 3 November 2008.
  3. Bradley Winterton, 'Book Review: Republican China rewritten', Taipei Times, 7 December 2008.
  4. Jonathan Fenby (30 July 2009). "The Generalissimo • The Age of Openness • Global Shanghai, 1850–2010". Times Higher Education.
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