Skip to product information
1 of 1

Between Heaven and Modernity

Regular price $90.00
Regular price $90.00 Sale price $90.00
Sold out
This book examines the contest between local people, state officials, and foreigners to lay claim to urban streets, state institutions, historic monuments, and temples in Suzhou, one of China's mo...
Read More
  • 20 June 2006
View Product Details

Combining social, political, and cultural history, this book examines the contestation over space, history, and power in the late Qing and Republican-era reconstruction of the ancient capital of Suzhou as a modern city. Located fifty miles west of Shanghai, Suzhou has been celebrated throughout Asia as a cynosure of Chinese urbanity and economic plenty for a thousand years. With the city's 1895 opening as a treaty port, businessmen and state officials began to draw on Western urban planning in order to bolster Chinese political and economic power against Japanese encroachment. As a result, both Suzhou as a whole and individual components of the cityscape developed new significance according to a calculus of commerce and nationalism. Japanese monks and travelers, Chinese officials, local people, and others competed to claim Suzhou’s streets, state institutions, historic monuments, and temples, and thereby to define the course of Suzhou’s and greater China’s modernity.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $90.00
Pages: 344
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Publication Date: 20 June 2006
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780804753593
Format: Hardcover
REVIEWS Icon
"The book is a wonderfully thoughtful piece. Rooted in archival research employing a wide variety of Chinese and Japanese sources, and informed by contemporary analyses of urban spaces and their impact on culture, it adds greatly to a growing, and fascinating, corpus of scholarship on urban change in China."
Peter J. Carroll is Assistant Professor of History at Northwestern University.