Editor’s Note: A course syllabus is available in the online supplements for this issue.
In 1793, the King of England, George III, sent a mission led by Lord George Macartney to the court of the Qianlong Emperor in China. The British were asking for a new arrangement for trade with the Qing empire, which at that point was conducted at a single port, Guangzhou, in the far south of the country, and had to take place through official intermediaries, known to the British as Hong merchants. Inspired by the increasing competitiveness of their products, as the Industrial Revolution was just getting underway, and by the rising economic doctrine of Free Trade articulated by Adam Smith and others, the British sought more open ports and the establishment of ongoing diplomatic relations with the imperial government. After some sparring over the ritual protocols for a meeting, Lord Macartney agreed to bend one knee to the emperor, and a formal audience took place at the Qing Summer Palace in the mountains northeast of Beijing. The Qianlong Emperor declined the British requests and sent a letter to George III explaining that while the Qing were happy to allow foreigners to come and buy the things they wanted from China, China had no need for the inferior products of the West. In 1793, this was still a reasonable thing for the ruler of China to say, but things were about to change in the configurations of global trade and power. This encounter between a British diplomat and the emperor of China at the end of the eighteenth century serves as one moment in the exploration of the history of China as a component of global history, a pivot point just as the realities of global geopolitics were about to be transformed by the Industrial Revolution. I teach an undergraduate survey course, Global History since 1500, at New Mexico State University. Teaching global history is always a challenge, given the temporal and geographic comprehensiveness of the topic. The richness of the field means that each of us who takes this challenge tailors the specifics of what we do to the realities of our own backgrounds, training, and expertise. I am primarily a historian of China, especially of the Ming dynasty, and while I have worked diligently over many years to broaden and deepen my understanding of the complexity and expansiveness of global history, my practice as a teacher of global history is strongly informed by that background. The basic design of my survey course, which meets three days a week for fifty minutes, with a typical enrollment of sixty to seventy-five students, combines lectures in class—for which I use PowerPoint slides emphasizing visual content, such as maps, photos, or other graphic imagery, with minimal text—and readings in a textbook and supplemental primary sources. I am currently using James Carter and Richard Warren’s Forging the Modern World as the textbook. There is a series of short writing assignments based on analyzing primary sources and using them to discuss the history that is being presented in the class at that point, which I draw from various sources and use in a kind of rotation from semester to semester. I give a midterm exam and a final, each of which includes a map on which students need to mark the location of ten places; a set of identification questions in which I ask them to give the where and when for individuals or events, as well as comment on their significance; and an essay question (two on the final) to synthesize material covered in the lectures and the readings.
The Great Courses
From Yao to Mao: 5000 Years of Chinese History
Professor Kenneth J. Hammond
In a world growing increasingly smaller, China still seems a faraway and exotic land, with secrets and mysteries of ages past, its history and intentions veiled from most Westerners. Yet behind that veil lies one of the most amazing civilizations the world has ever known. For most of its 5,000-year existence, China has been the largest, most populous, wealthiest, and mightiest nation on Earth. And for us as Westerners, it is essential to understand where China has been in order to anticipate its future. This course answers this need by delivering a comprehensive political and historical overview of one of the most fascinating and complex countries in world history. Dr. Hammond’s lectures are richly detailed and lead you on compelling forays across many aspects of China’s story. From a governing perspective, you’ll learn how the short-lived Qin dynasty—with “legalism” as its often-brutal ideology of governance—became the first unified empire, laying the basis for an enduring imperial order. And how the implementation of the imperial civil service examination system in the late tenth century gave intellectual issues renewed importance, and made the eleventh century flourish with great debate and discussion about literature, philosophy, government, and art. You’ll also learn the eye-opening story of how China was betrayed by the Allies at Versailles, precipitating riots in Beijing and helping pave the way for the emergence of the Communist Party. You’ll also explore how select artistic and intellectual events shaped China’s history. For example, learn about the great ceramic center at Jingdezhen, which, in the twelfth century, became one of the first true industrial cities in world history, its massive production lines setting the night sky ablaze with the glow from their great kilns.Source: From The Great Courses website at https://tinyurl.com/y6srzdtn.
As radical critiques of capitalism and imperialism emerged in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, China became one arena for the unfolding of an epic quest for national identity and self-determination. Many Chinese intellectuals and students, inspired by the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia and frustrated with what they viewed as the bankrupt liberal democracies of the victorious Allied Powers after World War I, who were seen as betraying China at the Versailles Peace Conference, began to search for radical alternatives to both Chinese tradition and Western models of modernity. This trajectory forms part of the wider global processes of anticolonial struggles and of the systemic conflict between the communist and capitalist alliances centered in the Soviet Union and the United States. Students consider the contrasting stories of movements in China, India, Việt Nam, Indonesia, Kenya, Algeria, and Cuba, and the varieties of postcolonial societies that emerged from these struggles. How this process was shaped by the Cold War in the decades after World War II is also explored, with the fall of the Berlin Wall and the collapse of the Soviet Union forming a transition point to some final themes in recent global history and a culminating retrospective on the semester. In a final lecture, I use a graph of global GDP percentages based on Angus Maddison’s study of economic history to illustrate some fundamental patterns spanning the period covered by this class. The graph shows the proportion of global economic activity taking place in China, India, Western Europe, the US, and the Middle East, covering the period from 1000 CE to 2008, with greater detail in more recent times. It clearly indicates that for many centuries the majority of economic production was concentrated in Asia, with China accounting for between 25 and 33 percent at various times. Beginning at the end of the eighteenth century, as the Industrial Revolution both expanded Western productivity and created new military capabilities, the levels of production began to change, with first India and then China declining dramatically, while Western Europe and then the US rose, reaching a point in the mid-twentieth century where China and India together contributed less than 10 percent, while Western Europe and the US made up nearly 60 percent. But then this again reverses with the end of Western colonialism and the beginnings of market socialist economic development in China. The most recent indicators suggest that as the twenty-first century progresses, with modern industrial productive technologies more evenly dispersed around the world, a global economic order much more similar to that at the beginning of our time period (1500) could once again become the norm. Teaching China as a part of global history is challenging and rewarding. It is impossible to address every aspect of human history over the past five centuries, so there is always an element of arbitrary selection in terms of the themes and topics covered. I try not to replace a Eurocentric order with a Sinocentric one, but I also aim to be clear that for most of the period from 1500 to the present, China was, and is again becoming, one of the most important places in the world. As a component of a complex planetary community, and as a society with its own special, often-epic, past, China is both an Asian Giant and a global player.
The Great Courses