Description

Book Synopsis
By examining the manufacturing, commercial, and cultural activities of the maverick industrialist Chen Diexian (18791940), Eugenia Lean illustrates how lettered men of early-twentieth-century China engaged in vernacular industrialism, the pursuit of industry and science outside of conventional venues.

Trade Review
Thoroughly researched and elegantly crafted . . . [this book] sheds fresh light on early twentieth-century China at a time when the nation was just entering global capitalism. * Journal of Chinese History *
Lean’s volume is an important contribution to our knowledge of Chinese industry’s progress in the first half of the twentieth century. * Technology and Culture *
Vernacular Industrialism in China is an astonishingly rich and original microhistory. In telling the fascinating story of Chen Diexian, Lean challenges us to rethink large swaths of modern Chinese history. An outstanding achievement of wit, erudition, and insight. -- Fa-ti Fan, author of British Naturalists in Qing China: Science, Empire, and Cultural Encounter
This pathbreaking book conclusively demonstrates that the values and habits of classically trained Chinese literati, so scorned by May Fourth modernizers, were fully reconcilable with modern science and technology. Eugenia Lean's “vernacular industrialism” will be a touchstone for all future work on the history of science and technology in China. -- Sigrid Schmalzer, author of Red Revolution, Green Revolution: Scientific Farming in Socialist China
Eugenia Lean has written an engrossing study of how popular industrialism arose in early twentieth-century China. Chen Diexian emerges from its pages as both representative and remarkable: an amateur scientist and literary celebrity turned serial entrepreneur, consumer products magnate, and do-it-yourself modernist. Through Chen’s career, Vernacular Industrialism in China traces a fascinating history of everyday innovations. -- Christopher Rea, author of The Age of Irreverence: A New History of Laughter in China
One of the great pleasures of reading Lean’s study is how she brings together Chen Diexian’s full range of literary
and entrepreneurial achievements for this portrait. She completes it with new analytical approaches to the social history of modern science and small-scale manufacturing in twentieth-century China. * Technology and Culture *
This is a highly learned book. Lean reads her sources closely and effectively situates her observations within a deeper Chinese past and across multiple thematic fields. . . [H]er observations shed much new light on the workings of the wider industrial modern world, and her concept of vernacular industrialism will find purchase in contexts far beyond cuttlefish bone–strewn Chinese shores. * Isis: A Journal of the History of Science Society *
This book, with its focus on light industry and consumer goods, is altogether a welcome addition to the fields of business and economic history of modern China. * East Asian Science, Technology, and Medicine *
A riveting microhistory with broader historiographical ambitions . . . Lean’s decision to focus on an individual entrepreneur makes this book highly readable for students of modern Chinese history and general readers who are interested in business history, knowledge production, science, and industry. * Business History Review *
Lean’s study contributes a deeply researched argument regarding an identifiable social fraction she calls 'vernacular industrialists.' * H-Net Reviews *

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I: Gentlemanly Experimentation in Turn-of-the-Century Hangzhou
1. Utility of the Useless
Part II: Manufacturing Knowledge, 1914–1927
2. One Part Cow Fat, Two Parts Soda: Recipes for the Inner Chambers, 1914–1915
3. An Enterprise of Common Knowledge: Fire Extinguishers, 1916–1935
Part III: Manufacturing Objects, 1913–1942
4. Chinese Cuttlefish and Global Circuits: The Association of Household Industries
5. What’s in a Name? From Studio Appellation to Commercial Trademark
6. Compiling the Industrial Modern, 1930–1941
Conclusion
Glossary
Notes
References
Index

Vernacular Industrialism in China Local

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A Hardback by Eugenia Lean

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    View other formats and editions of Vernacular Industrialism in China Local by Eugenia Lean

    Publisher: Columbia University Press
    Publication Date: 17/03/2020
    ISBN13: 9780231193481, 978-0231193481
    ISBN10: 0231193483

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    By examining the manufacturing, commercial, and cultural activities of the maverick industrialist Chen Diexian (18791940), Eugenia Lean illustrates how lettered men of early-twentieth-century China engaged in vernacular industrialism, the pursuit of industry and science outside of conventional venues.

    Trade Review
    Thoroughly researched and elegantly crafted . . . [this book] sheds fresh light on early twentieth-century China at a time when the nation was just entering global capitalism. * Journal of Chinese History *
    Lean’s volume is an important contribution to our knowledge of Chinese industry’s progress in the first half of the twentieth century. * Technology and Culture *
    Vernacular Industrialism in China is an astonishingly rich and original microhistory. In telling the fascinating story of Chen Diexian, Lean challenges us to rethink large swaths of modern Chinese history. An outstanding achievement of wit, erudition, and insight. -- Fa-ti Fan, author of British Naturalists in Qing China: Science, Empire, and Cultural Encounter
    This pathbreaking book conclusively demonstrates that the values and habits of classically trained Chinese literati, so scorned by May Fourth modernizers, were fully reconcilable with modern science and technology. Eugenia Lean's “vernacular industrialism” will be a touchstone for all future work on the history of science and technology in China. -- Sigrid Schmalzer, author of Red Revolution, Green Revolution: Scientific Farming in Socialist China
    Eugenia Lean has written an engrossing study of how popular industrialism arose in early twentieth-century China. Chen Diexian emerges from its pages as both representative and remarkable: an amateur scientist and literary celebrity turned serial entrepreneur, consumer products magnate, and do-it-yourself modernist. Through Chen’s career, Vernacular Industrialism in China traces a fascinating history of everyday innovations. -- Christopher Rea, author of The Age of Irreverence: A New History of Laughter in China
    One of the great pleasures of reading Lean’s study is how she brings together Chen Diexian’s full range of literary
    and entrepreneurial achievements for this portrait. She completes it with new analytical approaches to the social history of modern science and small-scale manufacturing in twentieth-century China. * Technology and Culture *
    This is a highly learned book. Lean reads her sources closely and effectively situates her observations within a deeper Chinese past and across multiple thematic fields. . . [H]er observations shed much new light on the workings of the wider industrial modern world, and her concept of vernacular industrialism will find purchase in contexts far beyond cuttlefish bone–strewn Chinese shores. * Isis: A Journal of the History of Science Society *
    This book, with its focus on light industry and consumer goods, is altogether a welcome addition to the fields of business and economic history of modern China. * East Asian Science, Technology, and Medicine *
    A riveting microhistory with broader historiographical ambitions . . . Lean’s decision to focus on an individual entrepreneur makes this book highly readable for students of modern Chinese history and general readers who are interested in business history, knowledge production, science, and industry. * Business History Review *
    Lean’s study contributes a deeply researched argument regarding an identifiable social fraction she calls 'vernacular industrialists.' * H-Net Reviews *

    Table of Contents
    Acknowledgments
    Introduction
    Part I: Gentlemanly Experimentation in Turn-of-the-Century Hangzhou
    1. Utility of the Useless
    Part II: Manufacturing Knowledge, 1914–1927
    2. One Part Cow Fat, Two Parts Soda: Recipes for the Inner Chambers, 1914–1915
    3. An Enterprise of Common Knowledge: Fire Extinguishers, 1916–1935
    Part III: Manufacturing Objects, 1913–1942
    4. Chinese Cuttlefish and Global Circuits: The Association of Household Industries
    5. What’s in a Name? From Studio Appellation to Commercial Trademark
    6. Compiling the Industrial Modern, 1930–1941
    Conclusion
    Glossary
    Notes
    References
    Index

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