1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9911011378003321

Autore

Kaske Elisabeth

Titolo

Age of Exploration : How Chinese Scientists and Administrators Discovered China

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Basel/Berlin/Boston : , : Walter de Gruyter GmbH, , 2024

©2024

ISBN

9783111245362

3111245365

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (300 pages)

Collana

Dialectics of the Global Series ; ; v.17

Altri autori (Persone)

KöllElisabeth

Disciplina

951

900

Soggetti

China Discovery and exploration Case studies

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

Intro -- On the Series -- Contents -- 1 Introduction -- Part I: Exploration -- 2 Remaking Hinterland Guizhou: Ding Wenjiang's (1887-1936) Pioneering Geo-surveys in Southwest China -- 3 Meteorological Explorations in Republican China: Observations on Mount Emei and Mount Tai during the International Polar Year 1932/33 -- 4 A Shared Journey for the Chinese Oil Dream: The Yumen Oilfield, Foreign Geologists and the Localization of Chinese Petroleum Geologists -- 5 Infrastructure, Ethnography, and the Integration of Xinjiang: The Northwest Reconstruction Expedition of 1943 -- Part II: Representation -- 6 Re-shaping the Imagined Community: Postal Maps and the Making of National Space for Young China -- 7 The KMT's Long March: Highways, War, and National Space in China's Southwest -- Part III: Reclamation -- 8 Planting the Seeds of the Nation: Agricultural Experimental Stations and the Making of the Chinese Geo-Body -- 9 Spatializing the State Through Forest Surveys: Constructing Verticality and Encompassment in the Early Years of the People's Republic of China -- 10 Experiments with Scale: The People's Electrification Campaign of 1958-1961 and China's Pursuit for a New Energy Future -- 11 Conclusion -- List of Contributors -- Index.

Sommario/riassunto

In the early twentieth century, Chinese intellectuals came to realize that



Westerners surpassed them not only in knowledge of the world, but also in knowledge of China itself. A rising generation of Chinese scientists, engineers, and administrators was eager to address this state of affairs and began to retrace the footsteps of Western explorers who had crisscrossed China during the preceding century. The nine case studies assembled in this book show how a new cohort of professional Chinese explorers traveled, studied, appropriated, and reshaped national space from the 1920s to the 1950s. In some instances, the explorers drew directly from the fieldwork practices of their Western predecessors. In others, they trained compilers to collect and systematize local knowledge that could be passed up the administrative hierarchy to government and national institutions. Their projects helped to claim natural resources, prepare for infrastructural development, and create new institutionalized knowledge and public engagement with textual representations of China’s geobody. This book elucidates the ways in which knowledge production in early twentieth-century China centered on space and contributed to China’s transformation into a modern nation-state.