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Local Self-Government in Late Qing: Political Discourse and Moral Reform

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2009

Extract

This article is a study of the concept of local self-government (difang zizht) in the context of reform efforts from 1898 to 1911. Of the institutional changes proposed, local self-government rapidly gained much support among China's educated elites. The author explores the reasons behind much enthusiasm for self-government institutions by analyzing the works of two key reformists, Kang Youwei (1858–1927) and Liang Qichao (1873–1929). While the reformist approach to local government indicated the continuing influence of the fengjian (feudal) tradition on the one hand, and the reformist notion of citizenship was suggestive of the Neo-Confucian conception of self-cultivation on the other, the article argues that the reformist thought on local self-government represents an important step in moving China beyond an imperial political order.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Notre Dame 1998

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References

1 Qichao, Liang, “Xin dalu youji jielu” (Excerpts of travel notes from the New World), in Yinbinshi heji (Collected works of Ice-Drinker's Studio) vol. 7 (Beijing: Zhonghua shuju, 1989), p. 121.Google Scholar

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4 For an excellent overview and assessment of scholarship on the subject, see the April 1993 special issue of Modern China, titled “Symposium: ‘Public Sphere’/‘Civil Society’ in China.” The issue contains articles by Heath B. Chamberlain, Philip C. C. Huang, Richard Madsen, Mary Backus Rankin, William T. Rowe and Frederic Wakeman Jr.

5 Both have written extensively on the subject. See, for example, Rankin, , Elite Activism and Political Transformation in China (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1986)Google Scholar; Rowe, , Hankow: Commerce and Society in a Chinese City, 1796–1889 (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1984).Google Scholar

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31 Ibid, pp. 265–66.

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36 Ibid, pp. 107–109.

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55 Ibid, p. 533.

56 Ibid, p. 534.

57 Ibid, p. 536.

58 Judge, , Print and Politics, pp. 100101.Google Scholar

59 Shi bao, reprinted in DFZZ1, no.12 (1904–5): 299–300. For a more detailed analysis of the content of Shi bao on the subject of local self-government, see Judge, , Print and Politics, pp. 170–79.Google Scholar

60 Tongwen huibao, reprinted in DFZZ 3, no.6 (1905): 125.

61 Shi bao, reprinted in DFZZ 1, no.9 (1904–05): 109–10. This article is also discussed in Kuhn, , “Late Ch'ing Views of the Polity,” pp. 1112.Google Scholar

62 Shimin bao, reprinted in DFZZ 1, no.10 (1904–5):254.

63 Lingdong ribao, reprinted in DFZZ 4, no.4 (1907): 71–74.

64 Lun lixian dangyou yubei” (Constitutionalism ought to require preparation), DFZZ 2, no.3 (1906): 4546.Google Scholar

65 Shi Bao, reprinted in DFZZ 1, no.6 (1905): 121–23. On the ambivalence of the reformists regarding the readiness of the Chinese people to take on an active political role, see Judge, , Print and Politics, pp. 112–16.Google Scholar

66 Tocqueville, , Democracy in America, pp. 6198, passim.Google Scholar

67 Ibid, pp. 88–89.

68 Ibid, p. 506.

69 Ibid, p. 10.

70 Ibid, pp. 506 and 525.

71 Ibid, p. 735.

72 Ibid, p. 668.

73 Ibid, p. 69.

74 Ibid, p. 93.

75 Ibid, p. 70.

76 See, for example, Putnam, Robert D., “Bowling Alone: America's Declining Social Capital,” Journal of Democracy 6 (1995): 6578.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

77 Tocqueville, , Democracy in America, p. 521.Google Scholar

78 Liang, , “Xin dalu youji jielu,” p. 123Google Scholar. As in the case of many Western writings, Tocqueville's work would have been available to Chinese intellectuals in late imperial China by way of Japanese translation. Although the first Japanese translation of Democracy in America was published between 1881 and 1882, there is no evidence that is suggestive of Liang's knowledge of Tocqueville. The first Chinese translation of Democracy in America was published in 1966.

79 Mitchell, Harvey, Individual Choice and the Structures of History: Alexis de Tocqueville as Historian Reappraised (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996), pp. 133–58.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

80 Judge makes the same observation in her analysis of the writings in Shibao, see Print and Politics pp. 83–99.