Description

Book Synopsis
Robert Culp explores the world of commercial publishing to offer a new perspective on modern China’s cultural transformations. Culp examines China’s largest and most influential publishing companies during the late Qing and Republican periods and into the early years of the People’s Republic.

Trade Review
Rich, meticulous, and sparkling with insight, this work further cements Culp's position as perhaps the foremost scholar of modern Chinese print culture, knowledge formation, and intellectual history working today. -- Thomas S. Mullaney, author of The Chinese Typewriter: A History
The Power of Print in Modern China is unprecedented in its richly researched account of the three publishing powerhouses that helped establish the terms of modern Chinese discourse from the early twentieth century through the 1960s. In tracking multiple dimensions of this tumultuous trajectory, Culp is attentive to the complex ways both vestiges of late imperial culture and the economic imperatives of industrial capitalism shaped Chinese publishing and reshaped understandings of intellectual labor. -- Joan Judge, author of Republican Lens: Gender, Visuality, and Experience in the Early Chinese Periodical Press
Comprehensive, well organized, and theoretically informed, The Power of Print in Modern China looks at the Chinese publishing industry, through its three major houses, from the inside out. The book highlights the surprising continuities found in the publishing industry from the late Qing into the early communist era until it was, in effect, destroyed in the Cultural Revolution. This is an important contribution to the social, cultural, and business history of modern China. -- Peter Zarrow, author of Educating China: Knowledge, Society and Textbooks in a Modernizing World, 1902-1937
This groundbreaking work on the industrialization of book publishing in China’s twentieth century resets the agenda of modern Chinese intellectual history. It offers a multifaceted interpretation about knowledge as work in the making of a pedagogical state under socialism. This is a must read for all concerned with issues about the state, knowledge professionals, and the structural transformation of the public sphere. -- Wen-hsin Yeh, University of California, Berkeley
In his new book The Power of Print in Modern China, with the usual adagio of words, Robert Culp unfolds to us the radical changes in the Chinese knowledge system through commercial publishing from the early twentieth century to the 1960s. -- Lara Yuyu Yang * The PRC History Review *
A must-read for anyone interested in print, power, modernity, or their interplay in China, and for anyone who might want to stroll through twentieth-century Chinese intellectual history with a new set of companions and not the usual suspects. * Modern Chinese Literature and Culture *
[A] lively account. * Times Literary Supplement *
It is fascinating to read about how ideas and hard work by enthusiastic and skillful people with physical tools created by mankind, as indicated by the cover of this book, are able to form a driving social force that moves the civilization forward. * Publishing Research Quarterly *
A great contribution, not only to the field of Chinese studies but also to media studies. * MEDIENwissenschaft *

Table of Contents
List of Figures
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
Part I. Recruiting Talent, Mobilizing Labor
1. Becoming Editors: Late Qing Literati’s Scholarly Lives and Cultural Production
2. Universities or Factories? Academics, Petty Intellectuals, and the Industrialization of Mental Labor
Part I Epilogue: War, Revolution, Hiatus
Part II. Creating Culture
3. Transforming Word and Concept Through Textbooks and Dictionaries
4. Repackaging the Past: Reproducing Classics Through Industrial Publishing
5. Introducing New Worlds of Knowledge: Series Publications and the Transformation of China’s Knowledge Culture
Part III. Legacies of Industrialized Cultural Production
6. Print Industrialism and State Socialism: Public-Private Joint Management and Divisions of Labor in the Early PRC Publishing Industry
7. Negotiated Cultural Production in the Pedagogical State
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index

The Power of Print in Modern China

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Order before 4pm today for delivery by Sat 20 Dec 2025.

A Hardback by Robert Culp

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    View other formats and editions of The Power of Print in Modern China by Robert Culp

    Publisher: Columbia University Press
    Publication Date: 28/05/2019
    ISBN13: 9780231184168, 978-0231184168
    ISBN10: 0231184166

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Robert Culp explores the world of commercial publishing to offer a new perspective on modern China’s cultural transformations. Culp examines China’s largest and most influential publishing companies during the late Qing and Republican periods and into the early years of the People’s Republic.

    Trade Review
    Rich, meticulous, and sparkling with insight, this work further cements Culp's position as perhaps the foremost scholar of modern Chinese print culture, knowledge formation, and intellectual history working today. -- Thomas S. Mullaney, author of The Chinese Typewriter: A History
    The Power of Print in Modern China is unprecedented in its richly researched account of the three publishing powerhouses that helped establish the terms of modern Chinese discourse from the early twentieth century through the 1960s. In tracking multiple dimensions of this tumultuous trajectory, Culp is attentive to the complex ways both vestiges of late imperial culture and the economic imperatives of industrial capitalism shaped Chinese publishing and reshaped understandings of intellectual labor. -- Joan Judge, author of Republican Lens: Gender, Visuality, and Experience in the Early Chinese Periodical Press
    Comprehensive, well organized, and theoretically informed, The Power of Print in Modern China looks at the Chinese publishing industry, through its three major houses, from the inside out. The book highlights the surprising continuities found in the publishing industry from the late Qing into the early communist era until it was, in effect, destroyed in the Cultural Revolution. This is an important contribution to the social, cultural, and business history of modern China. -- Peter Zarrow, author of Educating China: Knowledge, Society and Textbooks in a Modernizing World, 1902-1937
    This groundbreaking work on the industrialization of book publishing in China’s twentieth century resets the agenda of modern Chinese intellectual history. It offers a multifaceted interpretation about knowledge as work in the making of a pedagogical state under socialism. This is a must read for all concerned with issues about the state, knowledge professionals, and the structural transformation of the public sphere. -- Wen-hsin Yeh, University of California, Berkeley
    In his new book The Power of Print in Modern China, with the usual adagio of words, Robert Culp unfolds to us the radical changes in the Chinese knowledge system through commercial publishing from the early twentieth century to the 1960s. -- Lara Yuyu Yang * The PRC History Review *
    A must-read for anyone interested in print, power, modernity, or their interplay in China, and for anyone who might want to stroll through twentieth-century Chinese intellectual history with a new set of companions and not the usual suspects. * Modern Chinese Literature and Culture *
    [A] lively account. * Times Literary Supplement *
    It is fascinating to read about how ideas and hard work by enthusiastic and skillful people with physical tools created by mankind, as indicated by the cover of this book, are able to form a driving social force that moves the civilization forward. * Publishing Research Quarterly *
    A great contribution, not only to the field of Chinese studies but also to media studies. * MEDIENwissenschaft *

    Table of Contents
    List of Figures
    Acknowledgments
    List of Abbreviations
    Introduction
    Part I. Recruiting Talent, Mobilizing Labor
    1. Becoming Editors: Late Qing Literati’s Scholarly Lives and Cultural Production
    2. Universities or Factories? Academics, Petty Intellectuals, and the Industrialization of Mental Labor
    Part I Epilogue: War, Revolution, Hiatus
    Part II. Creating Culture
    3. Transforming Word and Concept Through Textbooks and Dictionaries
    4. Repackaging the Past: Reproducing Classics Through Industrial Publishing
    5. Introducing New Worlds of Knowledge: Series Publications and the Transformation of China’s Knowledge Culture
    Part III. Legacies of Industrialized Cultural Production
    6. Print Industrialism and State Socialism: Public-Private Joint Management and Divisions of Labor in the Early PRC Publishing Industry
    7. Negotiated Cultural Production in the Pedagogical State
    Conclusion
    Notes
    Bibliography
    Index

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