Picnics Prohibited: Diplomacy in a Chaotic China during the First World War: Penguin Specials

· Sold by Penguin Group Australia
Ebook
104
Pages
Eligible

About this ebook

The ripple effects of the First World War came at an inopportune time for the infant Chinese republic. The country had joined a number of international organisations and ratified the Hague Conventions, but found its diplomatic efforts hampered by its young, inexperienced leadership, its factional regional divisions and its foreign-controlled treaty ports and concessions.

Unfortunately for the Chinese, representatives of combatant nations navigated a diplomatic tightrope between carrying out their patriotic duty to support war efforts and making sure their 'hosts', the Chinese, did not take advantage of the turbulence to upset the colonial pecking order.

About the author

Frances Wood recently retired as Curator of Chinese Collections at the British Library. She has written numerous books on China including Did Marco Polo go to China?, No Dogs and Not Many Chinese: Treaty Port Life in China and The Diamond Sutra: The Story of the World's Earliest Dated Printed Book. She continues to research and write in London.

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