Book contents
- Modern Erasures
- Modern Erasures
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures and Maps
- Acknowledgments
- Note on the Text
- Introduction
- Part I Seeing and Not Seeing
- 1 Networks into China’s Northwest
- 2 New Culture Lenses onto Rural Life
- 3 Projections onto a “Chinese Screen”
- Part II Revolutionary Memory in Republican China
- Part III Maoist Narratives in the Forties
- Part IV Politics of Oblivion in the People’s Republic
- Conclusion
- Glossary
- Bibliography
- Index
1 - Networks into China’s Northwest
from Part I - Seeing and Not Seeing
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 March 2022
- Modern Erasures
- Modern Erasures
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures and Maps
- Acknowledgments
- Note on the Text
- Introduction
- Part I Seeing and Not Seeing
- 1 Networks into China’s Northwest
- 2 New Culture Lenses onto Rural Life
- 3 Projections onto a “Chinese Screen”
- Part II Revolutionary Memory in Republican China
- Part III Maoist Narratives in the Forties
- Part IV Politics of Oblivion in the People’s Republic
- Conclusion
- Glossary
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
This chapter charts four social channels leading into China’s Northwest at the time of the great earthquake centered in Haiyuan, Gansu, in 1920: native Gansu networks; national (political and charitable) networks; foreign (missionary and other) networks; and scientific (geological) networks. Using newspaper accounts, telegraph cables, letters and reports as they made their way through journalistic and consular channels, the chapter aims to capture different strands of cultural memory of a monumental disaster as reports of it travelled beyond stricken areas to Chinese cities and overseas. As this chapter shows, exploring the ways in which crisis events were responded to, commented on and remembered reveals a good deal about cultural practices at the time. Writing on the earthquake and wider famine fields of early republican China would reflect three increasingly conflated areas of intellectual activity around the May Fourth movement of 1919: the valorization of science and the scientific method; commentary on China’s ongoing transition to republican politics; and diagnostic exercises on the social and moral health of the nation. One key aspect of the cultural production of this period explored in this book is the invisibility it afforded certain historical actors and the indispensability it afforded others.
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- Modern ErasuresRevolution, the Civilizing Mission, and the Shaping of China's Past, pp. 31 - 59Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022