Nationalism in Early Modern China Research Paper
Nationalism in Early Modern China
An examination of the transformation from Han Nationalism to Republicanism in early modern China.
# 4259
| 3,740 words
| 8 sources
| 2002
|

Published
on May 06, 2002
in
History
(Asian)
, Political Science
(Non-U.S.)
, Asian Studies
(General)
, Public Administration
(General)
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Description:
This paper examines the development of nationalism in modern China, from the Han response to the Qing government to anti-imperialist agitation and republicanism under the guidance of Sun Yatsen. It looks briefly at the New Culture Movement and the role of secret societies such as the Tongmeng hui.
From the paper:
"Nationalism has been a defining ideology in the creation of Modern China, promoted at first by a series of secret societies, and later by both the Guomingdang and the Chinese Communist Party to achieve different ends. It was central to the early student movements, and the May Fourth Movement, and nationalism was the first of Sun Yatsen's Three Principles of the People. In its early stages, Chinese nationalism was based on ethnic and racial identity, and centered on Han identity, however over time the significance of ethnic identity has decreased. Foreign influence in the conceptualization of Chinese nationalism has been problematic to developing a clear understanding of the movement; despite this, nationalism developed in a particularly Chinese manner."
From the paper:
"Nationalism has been a defining ideology in the creation of Modern China, promoted at first by a series of secret societies, and later by both the Guomingdang and the Chinese Communist Party to achieve different ends. It was central to the early student movements, and the May Fourth Movement, and nationalism was the first of Sun Yatsen's Three Principles of the People. In its early stages, Chinese nationalism was based on ethnic and racial identity, and centered on Han identity, however over time the significance of ethnic identity has decreased. Foreign influence in the conceptualization of Chinese nationalism has been problematic to developing a clear understanding of the movement; despite this, nationalism developed in a particularly Chinese manner."
Cite this Research Paper:
APA Format
Nationalism in Early Modern China (2002, May 06)
Retrieved June 04, 2023, from https://www.academon.com/research-paper/nationalism-in-early-modern-china-4259/
MLA Format
"Nationalism in Early Modern China" 06 May 2002.
Web. 04 June. 2023. <https://www.academon.com/research-paper/nationalism-in-early-modern-china-4259/>