'Building Culture in Early Qing Yangzhou' Book Cover

Building Culture in Early Qing Yangzhou

Tobie Meyer-Fong
March 2003
304 Pages
Hardcover ISBN: 9780804744850
Format
Region
Desk, Examination, or Review Copy Requests

This book explores cultural change in a Chinese city following the Manchu conquest of 1644. The city of Yangzhou, at the intersection of the Grand Canal and the Yangzi river, is best known as the site of human and physical devastation during the conquest and as a vibrant commercial center during the eighteenth century.

The book focuses on the period between the conquest and the city’s commercial florescence—a moment in which Yangzhou was a center of literary culture that was consciously conceived as transregional and transdynastic.

The book shows how Yangzhou’s elite used physical sites as markers in the reconstruction of the city, and as vehicles consolidating power and prestige. Gradually, however, the gestures and sites of the postconquest elite were appropriated by the city’s increasingly powerful salt merchants and incorporated into a court-oriented culture centered at Beijing.

"Tobie Meyer-Fong's book provides deep insight into the cultural history of Yangzhou during the second half of the seventeenth century, a period less documented and studied than the century of wealth that followed."—The Journal of Asian Studies

Tobie Meyer-Fong is Assistant Professor of History at Johns Hopkins University.
  • Coming to Terms with Civil War in 19th Century China
    Tobie Meyer-Fong
  • Political Participation in Republican Buenos Aires
    Hilda Sabato
  • Award winner

    Opera and the City

    The Politics of Culture in Beijing, 1770-1900
    Andrea S. Goldman
  • The Eight Banners and Ethnic Identity in Late Imperial China
    Mark C. Elliott
  • Cross-Cultural Contact and Conflict in Sixteenth-Century Peru
    Susan Elizabeth Ramírez