The fourth volume in this fun, comic-style series that explores China's move to modernization!
Who founded China? Are Chinese people religious? What is Chinese culture and how has it changed over time? The Understanding China Through Comics series answers these questions and more.
The fourth volume in the Understanding China Through Comics series The Making of Modern China, covers the stunningly productive Ming dynasty and its fall to the Manchus under the Qing, the last Chinese dynasty. The book also addresses Wang Yangming's School of Mind and the painful process of modernization and conflict with the West and Japan, including the Opium Wars and the Boxer Rebellion.
- Price: $9.95
- Publisher: Stone Bridge Press
- Imprint: Stone Bridge Press
- Series: Understanding China Through Comics
- Publication Date: 1st July 2018
- Illustration Note: B&W illustrations throughout, tables
- ISBN: 9781611729276
- Format: eBook
- Age: 10+
- BISACs:
COMICS & GRAPHIC NOVELS / Nonfiction / General
HISTORY / Asia / China
TRAVEL / Asia / China
POLITICAL SCIENCE / World / Asian
"A great way to learn about China's vast history!"
—Amy Tan, author of The Joy Luck Club"Excels at clarifying the often-confusing transitional periods between dynasties… An excellent introduction to the large trends of early Chinese history.”
—School Library Journal"Combines breezy style with historical rigor to strike just the right gong-tone for a middle school audience approaching the vast scope of Chinese history."
—Education About Asia5/5 Stars "An invaluable source... Chinese history is a vast subject, but Jing Liu has a skillful ability to condense it all into an interesting and manageable narrative."
—Kids' Book Buzz"The combination of silhouettes—often threatening, martial ones—with open-faced, expressively individualized figures of many social classes adds dramatic tension while neatly balancing the big-picture narrative. There's a lot to absorb even in this abbreviated form, but the visual approach lightens the load considerably."
—Kirkus Reviews
TEACHER AND PROFESSOR TESTIMONIALS
"This book is “The Magic School Bus” for those starting to explore Chinese culture."
—Dan Cao, Instructor at Confucius Institute at UC Davis"An excellent history that clearly explains the great (and ordinary) people who have made China what it is and the conflicts and debates that have shaped Chinese history. There is nothing else like it in English or Chinese."
—Alan Baumler, Professor of History at Indiana University of Pennsylvania"No more burying yourself in text-heavy history books to learn about China, this comic-style book manages to be rich in information and bring Chinese history to readers in a more clear, fun, and accessible way than it’s ever been done before. Easily integrated into a social studies or Chinese culture curriculum, I can’t wait to get a copy for my class."
—Grace Zeng, Chinese Teacher and Middle School Chinese Curriculum Area Leader at International School of Beijing"Since the 1990s, Jing Liu has been entertaining and informing foreigners about China with his cartoons. His new series of comic books is a fun, easy, accessible way to gain a basic understanding of Chinese history and culture."
—Jeremy Goldkorn, Founder of Danwei"This comic series is fantastic to use in the classroom. My students are drawn to this book - not only do they enjoy this graphic-novel style, it also helps them understand difficult historical concepts. What a fun supplement to the regular textbook!"
—Leslie Burgoine, Middle School History Teacher, Portland, Oregon
From penniless farm boy to emperor of China .
Nanjing
Reunifying China
Turning inward: The Ming Dynasty, 1368 – 1644 .
Protector of the poor .
- Low tax .
Labor duties .
Leave people alone .
Low pay and corruption .
Local officials .
Central government officials .
Warehouse administrators .
Students .
“What a difficult situation this is!” .
Short-term measures with long-term implications
Losing control of its own currency .
- Failure of copper coins .
Overspending destroys paper money .
Retreat .
Turning to silver .
Japanese pirates .
Tax monetization for war .
Macau .
“Why are we fighting with our money supply?” .
Spanish Americas .
“We don’t control the trade or the source of silver.”
Conscientious individuals in a flawed system .
- Wang Yangming and the School of Mind .
Core teaching .
Impact .
Hai Rui, the oddball .
Zhang Juzheng and a last attempt to save the empire
“It’s a bad time to run out of money” .
Final years of the Ming Dynasty .
- “Bandits can tear my body apart, but don’t hurt my people”
Manchus and the West: The Qing Dynasty, 1644 – 1912
“We’re here to protect Chinese tradition” .
- The last Ming resistance in Taiwan
Century of peace .
- Growing economy .
Territorial expansion .
Early contact with the West .
Re-establishing trade .
American crops .
Jesuits
Turning point .
- System failure .
Rise of industrial Britain .
Bankruptcy .
Opium trade .
The first Opium War .
The invisible hand
Heavenly Kingdom of Great Peace rebellion
- “Jesus is my brother!” .
Scholars against the rebels .
The second Opium War
Self-strengthening
- Empress Dowager Cixi to the rescue .
Sir Robert Hart, head of the Chinese customs service.
Burlingame, ambassador for America and China .
New hope - the Beiyang force
Philo McGiffin and the Chinese navy .
- Incompatible with tradition .
A new academy at Weihai Wei
When the dragon meets the rising sun .
Rise of industrial Japan .
- Line of advantage
The first Sino-Japanese war .
- The Korean crisis .
Declaration of war .
Getting ready .
The Battle of Yalu River .
Encounter .
Outnumbered battle .
Fire in the forecastle .
Withdraw .
Battle results .
Total defeat
Aftermath .
- Peace treaty .
Diaoyu Islands .
Japan’s path to imperial power .
Carving up China
Hundred Days’ Reform
Society on the eve of revolution .
- Modern city life .
Impoverished countryside .
“Now you must turn to God!” .
Tensions in the birthplace of Confucius .
Last straw from the Forbidden City
The storm of 1900 .
- Battle of Beijing .
Eight-nation alliance .
Boxer Protocol .
Final humiliation .
Revolution
Sun Zhongshan, father of modern China .
The fourth volume in this fun, comic-style series that explores China's move to modernization!
Who founded China? Are Chinese people religious? What is Chinese culture and how has it changed over time? The Understanding China Through Comics series answers these questions and more.
The fourth volume in the Understanding China Through Comics series The Making of Modern China, covers the stunningly productive Ming dynasty and its fall to the Manchus under the Qing, the last Chinese dynasty. The book also addresses Wang Yangming's School of Mind and the painful process of modernization and conflict with the West and Japan, including the Opium Wars and the Boxer Rebellion.
- Price: $9.95
- Publisher: Stone Bridge Press
- Imprint: Stone Bridge Press
- Series: Understanding China Through Comics
- Publication Date: 1st July 2018
- Illustrations Note: B&W illustrations throughout, tables
- ISBN: 9781611729276
- Format: eBook
- Age: 10+
- BISACs:
COMICS & GRAPHIC NOVELS / Nonfiction / General
HISTORY / Asia / China
TRAVEL / Asia / China
POLITICAL SCIENCE / World / Asian
"A great way to learn about China's vast history!"
—Amy Tan, author of The Joy Luck Club"Excels at clarifying the often-confusing transitional periods between dynasties… An excellent introduction to the large trends of early Chinese history.”
—School Library Journal"Combines breezy style with historical rigor to strike just the right gong-tone for a middle school audience approaching the vast scope of Chinese history."
—Education About Asia5/5 Stars "An invaluable source... Chinese history is a vast subject, but Jing Liu has a skillful ability to condense it all into an interesting and manageable narrative."
—Kids' Book Buzz"The combination of silhouettes—often threatening, martial ones—with open-faced, expressively individualized figures of many social classes adds dramatic tension while neatly balancing the big-picture narrative. There's a lot to absorb even in this abbreviated form, but the visual approach lightens the load considerably."
—Kirkus Reviews
TEACHER AND PROFESSOR TESTIMONIALS
"This book is “The Magic School Bus” for those starting to explore Chinese culture."
—Dan Cao, Instructor at Confucius Institute at UC Davis"An excellent history that clearly explains the great (and ordinary) people who have made China what it is and the conflicts and debates that have shaped Chinese history. There is nothing else like it in English or Chinese."
—Alan Baumler, Professor of History at Indiana University of Pennsylvania"No more burying yourself in text-heavy history books to learn about China, this comic-style book manages to be rich in information and bring Chinese history to readers in a more clear, fun, and accessible way than it’s ever been done before. Easily integrated into a social studies or Chinese culture curriculum, I can’t wait to get a copy for my class."
—Grace Zeng, Chinese Teacher and Middle School Chinese Curriculum Area Leader at International School of Beijing"Since the 1990s, Jing Liu has been entertaining and informing foreigners about China with his cartoons. His new series of comic books is a fun, easy, accessible way to gain a basic understanding of Chinese history and culture."
—Jeremy Goldkorn, Founder of Danwei"This comic series is fantastic to use in the classroom. My students are drawn to this book - not only do they enjoy this graphic-novel style, it also helps them understand difficult historical concepts. What a fun supplement to the regular textbook!"
—Leslie Burgoine, Middle School History Teacher, Portland, Oregon
From penniless farm boy to emperor of China .
Nanjing
Reunifying China
Turning inward: The Ming Dynasty, 1368 – 1644 .
Protector of the poor .
- Low tax .
Labor duties .
Leave people alone .
Low pay and corruption .
Local officials .
Central government officials .
Warehouse administrators .
Students .
“What a difficult situation this is!” .
Short-term measures with long-term implications
Losing control of its own currency .
- Failure of copper coins .
Overspending destroys paper money .
Retreat .
Turning to silver .
Japanese pirates .
Tax monetization for war .
Macau .
“Why are we fighting with our money supply?” .
Spanish Americas .
“We don’t control the trade or the source of silver.”
Conscientious individuals in a flawed system .
- Wang Yangming and the School of Mind .
Core teaching .
Impact .
Hai Rui, the oddball .
Zhang Juzheng and a last attempt to save the empire
“It’s a bad time to run out of money” .
Final years of the Ming Dynasty .
- “Bandits can tear my body apart, but don’t hurt my people”
Manchus and the West: The Qing Dynasty, 1644 – 1912
“We’re here to protect Chinese tradition” .
- The last Ming resistance in Taiwan
Century of peace .
- Growing economy .
Territorial expansion .
Early contact with the West .
Re-establishing trade .
American crops .
Jesuits
Turning point .
- System failure .
Rise of industrial Britain .
Bankruptcy .
Opium trade .
The first Opium War .
The invisible hand
Heavenly Kingdom of Great Peace rebellion
- “Jesus is my brother!” .
Scholars against the rebels .
The second Opium War
Self-strengthening
- Empress Dowager Cixi to the rescue .
Sir Robert Hart, head of the Chinese customs service.
Burlingame, ambassador for America and China .
New hope - the Beiyang force
Philo McGiffin and the Chinese navy .
- Incompatible with tradition .
A new academy at Weihai Wei
When the dragon meets the rising sun .
Rise of industrial Japan .
- Line of advantage
The first Sino-Japanese war .
- The Korean crisis .
Declaration of war .
Getting ready .
The Battle of Yalu River .
Encounter .
Outnumbered battle .
Fire in the forecastle .
Withdraw .
Battle results .
Total defeat
Aftermath .
- Peace treaty .
Diaoyu Islands .
Japan’s path to imperial power .
Carving up China
Hundred Days’ Reform
Society on the eve of revolution .
- Modern city life .
Impoverished countryside .
“Now you must turn to God!” .
Tensions in the birthplace of Confucius .
Last straw from the Forbidden City
The storm of 1900 .
- Battle of Beijing .
Eight-nation alliance .
Boxer Protocol .
Final humiliation .
Revolution
Sun Zhongshan, father of modern China .