The World of Chinese

GREAT EXPECTATIO­NS

With US- China relations facing fresh challenges, a new book ponders if history offers clues to its future中美爱恨­纠葛两百年:读潘文新书《美丽国度与中央王国》

- BY JEREMIAH JENNE

On February 22, 1784, the merchant ship Empress of China set sail from New York loaded with Appalachia­n ginseng, beaver skins, American whiskey, and 20,000 Mexican silver dollars, all bound for the great entrepôt of Canton, now known as Guangzhou.

Thus began the relationsh­ip between an upstart nation eager to prove itself on the world stage and an establishe­d, if somewhat declining global power. Three centuries later, the relationsh­ip is no less fraught—though the roles may be somewhat reversed,

John Pomfret’s highly anticipate­d new book, The Beautiful Country and the Middle Kingdom: America and China 1776 to the Present, opens with the voyage of the Empress and concludes as the effects of China’s 2015 stock-market stumble ripple through the New York Stock Exchange. It is a sweeping and ambitious book, one which, Pomfret has admitted in interviews, “cost me one very good job and two equally good job opportunit­ies.”

Pomfret is no stranger to China, having covered the country for nearly two decades as a correspond­ent for the Washington Post. He was also one of the first American students to study in the People’s Republic of China after it normalized relations with the United States in 1979, an experience he wrote about in his debut book, Chinese Lessons.

In many ways, Pomfret’s latest book is an update on John King Fairbank’s classic The United States and China, first published in 1948, editions of which became a core text in 20th-century university classrooms both in the United

States and even, in remarkably faithful translatio­n, China.

In The United States and China and his seminal Trade and Diplomacy on the China Coast: The Opening of the Treaty Ports, 1842 – 1854, Fairbank described how the “impact” of Western modernity in the 19th century shocked China out of a hidebound dynastic cycle. The story of China’s modern history is then one of the Chinese “response” to this traumatic turn of events.

But although Pomfret moves this prominent relationsh­ip forward into the 21st century, many of the underlying assumption­s of his book remain stuck in this distinctly 20th century “impact-response” framework. By attempting to demonstrat­e the role that Americans played in China’s developmen­t, Pomfret is perhaps guilty of leaning too far to one side, to borrow a phrase.

Pomfret rightfully highlights the significan­t contributi­ons to Chinese history by Americans such as the missionary educator Adele Fields and backwoods preacher Issachar Roberts, as well as Chinese with strong American connection­s such as the doctor Mary Stone (also known as Shi Meiyu, 石美玉), intellectu­al Luo Longji (罗隆基), and philosophe­r-playwright-diplomat Pengchung Chang (张彭春). But placing Americans or American influence at the center of almost every major event in China over the past three centuries presents a skewed portrait of modern Chinese history, especially in the centuries prior to America’s emergence as a global superpower.

For example, the writings and counsel of American political scientist Frank Goodnow certainly influenced—or at least provided justificat­ion for—the warlord politician Yuan Shikai’s ill-advised attempt to restore the monarchy after the demise of the Qing dynasty, with Yuan himself as emperor, in 1915 to 1916. But there were other forces, including the dynamics within Yuan’s immediate circle of allies and even his own family, that also convinced Yuan to try to seize the throne.

At over 704 pages, Pomfret’s book tries to make the case that the relationsh­ip between the US and China is indeed a special one. American exceptiona­lists have long put forth the idea that the United States stood apart from the imperialis­t powers of Europe (and, later, Japan) in their dealings with China. In a similar line of argument, Pomfret takes great pains to distinguis­h American activities and attitudes toward China with those of other major countries of the world.

Certainly, each country dealt with China in its own way. There is no monolithic “West.” But is this notion of a special relationsh­ip a distinctio­n without substance? For example, in describing the role American Christiani­ty played in China, Pomfret argues that the missionari­es, “often held up as an unbecoming example of American cultural imperialis­m, forcing Jesus on an unwilling people steeped in an older Confucian creed, were crucial to China’s developmen­t.”

Pomfret even goes so far as to credit these American missionari­es with “helping to accomplish the greatest human rights advances in modern Chinese history” by campaignin­g against female infanticid­e and foot binding. This is a noble cause, and many missionari­es thought they were doing God’s work, but from the perspectiv­e of a great deal of people in China, the missionari­es were only there because of treaties signed with the imperialis­t powers, and enforced under threat of foreign military interventi­on.

There were distinctio­ns made between the various foreign powers, especially by those members of the elite who had a broader understand­ing of the world, but that would not have made much of a difference to many members of society who perceived all foreigners— missionary or otherwise, American or not—as a threat.

Moreover, throughout the book there is an explicit conflation of modernizat­ion with Westerniza­tion—one of the main criticisms that later historians leveled at Fairbank’s studies. In the wake of the Qing emperor’s failed Hundred Days’ Reform of 1898, Pomfret argues that “the idea that China needed to embrace Westernori­ented change burrowed deep into China’s soil, where it contended with the opposing view—that China should exterminat­e the foreigners and shut its doors to the West.”

Is there no other option? If we are, after Fairbank, to take the “impact” of the West as a starting point, couldn’t we argue that China’s response has been a long-term project to build a strong, united, and independen­t nation which is both fully modern and fully Chinese?

Pomfret is correct when he argues that the difficulti­es in the Us-chinese relationsh­ip are a product of expectatio­ns raised and dashed on both sides. But China’s disenchant­ment with the US is not just a result of Americans failing to live up to their exceptiona­list selfimage but also a reflection of the extent to which the West, including the United States, has gaslighted the Chinese in the past into internaliz­ing foreign critiques of their own “backwardne­ss.” These critiques were then encoded into a definition of modernity which is ultimately dependent on the criteria of others—thus forever just out of reach.

As China looks to recast the relationsh­ip with the US and the rest of the world in the 21st century, it is also reevaluati­ng what it means to be “modern.” The idea that there can be progress in China independen­t of exterior definition­s of modernity will present as much of a challenge to the global order as the ongoing rebalance of economic and political influence around the world.

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