Shanghai's population increased tenfold between 1842 and 1945. The city's sojourners included foreigners, but were mostly Chinese immigrants from the countryside. They came in waves, attracted to the light industry and commerce, as well as the new form of cosmopolitanism, that were developing in the city. This volume describes the sojourners and how they formed their identities in the leading metropolis of the lower Yangzi valley.
Format:Paperback
Language:English
ISBN:1557290350
ISBN13:9781557290359
Release Date:January 1995
Publisher:Institute of East Asian Studies University of
Frederic Wakeman started his academic career as an expert on late Imperial China, and in recent years became a fine historian of 20th-century Shanghai. Here he and other leading scholars present cutting-edge research on modern China's economic and cultural hub. Most chapters are superb, and later became full-length books; while they cannot supplant the longer works, this collection may help readers avoid the cost of a shelf full of monographs. Many topics explored here are the stuff of Shanghai's legendary "Whore of the East" image, such as prostitution, drugs, gangsters (Brian Martin's study of the Green Gang is especially strong), labor turmoil and political intrigue. But the in-depth analysis and data shows that for most residents, the city was a place of hard work, struggle and cramped if convivial living. It was far more than the exotic playground noted by numerous visitors---though the city never lacked opportunities for indulging every kind of taste, and vice. Clearer maps would help, as would illustrations of this much-photographed city, but this is a superior edited book on a perenially fascinating place.
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