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The Oxford History of Modern China

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'excellent' LSE Review of Books

China is the world's most populous country and newest superpower, whose place on the international stage can only be understood through the lens of its modern history.

The Oxford History of Modern China is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand this rising power in what promises to be the 'Chinese century'. Covering the period of dramatic shifts and surprising transformations which comprise China's modern history, the book spans from the founding of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1912) to the present day. It introduces readers to important but often overlooked events in China's past, such as the bloody Taiping Civil War (1850-1864),
and also sheds new light on more familiar landmarks in Chinese history, such as the Opium War (1839-1842), the Boxer Uprising of 1900, the rise to power of the Chinese Communist Party in 1949, the Tiananmen protests and Beijing Massacre of 1989, and China's rise to economic superpower status in the 21st century.
A new chapter for this edition brings the story into the era of Xi Jinping.

512 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 27, 2022

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About the author

Jeffrey N. Wasserstrom

43 books40 followers
Jeffrey N. Wasserstrom, a Professor of History at the University of California, Irvine, is a modern Chinese social and cultural historian, with a strong interest in connecting China's past to its present and placing both into comparative and global perspective. He has taught and written about subjects ranging from gender to revolution, human rights to urban change.

His work has received funding from the Charlotte W. Newcombe Foundation.

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Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
Profile Image for WIlliam Gerrard.
218 reviews11 followers
December 5, 2025
China is a massive superpower. To understand China and its role in the modern world, it is imperative to understand its history. This well written modern history details in brief the key points to note in the rise of China from the late Ming dynasty in 1550, through to the present day and the rule of President Xi Jinping. A team of separate specialist authors have penned each chapter. The book is quite simple to read, with large text and there is a coherent flow between the different themes. There is a focus on the more modern era during the twentieth and twenty-first century but. A basic understanding of what precedes this helps in forming an understanding of how and why China is as it is today.
The Ming Dynasty was a high point of Chinese culture. They believed that their empire had everything it needed and the Emperor closed off China to the rest of the world, scuttling its treasure ships and ending almost all contact with the outside world. It was a self-sufficient, a self-serving Empire.
The Qing dynasty followed on and the territory of China was doubled as to what it had been under the Ming. In 1796 the White Lotus uprisings sprung up, a radical strain of millenarian Buddhism that sought an end to Qing rule. In the 1800s the British East India Company started to shift massive amounts of opium from India into China, getting a vast amount of the population hooked on its smokable form. In 1840 the first Opium War was fought between Britain and China. The Treaty of Nanjing brought it to an end in 1842.This was what ceded Hong Kong to Britain in a 150 year lease. This was the start of the Chinese ‘Century of Humiliation’ which only came to an end with the successful communist revolution in 1949. A second Opium War broke out in 1856. After this and the Treaty of Tianjin, there continued to be a large foreign presence in China.
Around the turn of the century saw an uprising against the despised Manchu rulers, favouring the majority Han Chinese. The Boxer rebellion sprang up from the Christian community and garnered support in the Western world. This uprising was brutally suppressed. It led to greater Chinese nationalism at the start of the twentieth century. The Kuomintang was the Nationalist party and incorporated into it a newly formed Communist Party joined the ranks. A revolution in 1911 saw the Qing abdicate and the republic of China was born. Sun Yat-Sen was the key figure in the new unified Chinese State although this was a period with dominance by Warlords. After Sun’s death Chiang Kai-shek seized power and his anti-communist stance saw the start of civil war. Also a fierce war with the Japanese who had seized Manchuria (Manchukuo) occupied politics. Mao Tse-Tung or Mao Zedong, Chairman Mao led the communists against the Kuomintang government. There was brutal oppression in Shanghai and many communists were murdered. They eventually conducted a ‘Long March’ with the Red Army settling in a region in the North West of China where they founded Soviets and set about land reform for the peasants. Eventually the Nationalists and Communists ceased their internal strife and fought together against the Japanese invaders. World War 2 saw the Chinese unite with the Allies and ultimately defeat Japan. Civil War continued after 1945 until the eventual Communist Revolution that succeeded in 1949, catapulting Chairman Mao to power. Chiang Kai-shek fled to Taiwan where he sought refuge with his remaining forces and government.
The Century of Humiliation had ended and under the guidance of the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) a new China was formed and the CCP remain in power to this day. There was initial brotherhood with the Soviet Union and China was immediately thrown up against the Western democracies and international order by coming to the aid of the DPRK (North Korea) in the Korean War. International isolation was very much the theme for many years but China carved its own niche and developed foreign policies outside of existing models. The Sino - Soviet split saw a divide in the communist world. Maoism was a great export and Mao ‘s personality cult was imposed. The ‘Little Red Book’ was dispersed far and wide and The West were scared of the domino effect of communism spreading across Southeast Asia and the world. Mao continued with revolutionary ideas and was trying to bring China up to speed with the modern world. You could argue that his ’Great Leap Forward’ and ‘Cultural Revolution’ were great failures and his ruthless policies did indeed lead to the deaths of many of his own people, indeed he is believed to have killed more of his own people than any other dictator or leader in history, many through famines.
After the death of Mao in 1976, there was a struggle to replace him and we enter into the reform era of Deng Xiaoping. Distance was attempted to be put between the Party and Mao and a rapprochement was sought with the West. Through Henry Kissinger’s diplomacy, President Nixon made a famous visit to China and it was back again at the world table, entering the WTO and taking its seat at the United Nations. China started to rebuild and modernise its economy at great speed, paving the way for it to become the global superpower we see today. Some policies were seen as brutal, for example, the one child policy, that tried to tackle identified demographic issues with population growth. China continued to grow, becoming a manufacturing base for much tech.
Around the time of the fall of the Soviet Union, when the Iron Curtain fell, China had their own global crisis in 1989, when a student revolt was crushed with the Red Army’s tanks and many in Tianamen Square were massacred. There was public outcry but the CCP continued to survive and democratic reform was kept at bay.
Into the modern era, after years of opening up to the West, and allowing for capitalist enterprise to live side by side with the Communist one-Party State system, a populist leader in Xi Jinping has taken the helm. He is reverting to many Maoist tactics, has his one personality cult, for example, and is pursuing vast projects such as the One Belt, One Road Chinese foreign policy initiative that is broadening Chinese influence across the globe. A new Cold War is de facto between the USA and China as military tensions build as their economies fight each other for global dominance. China has mainly lifted its vast population out of poverty and although many of its policies such as human rights against minority populations, democratic freedoms and its vast surveillance networks are quite alien to us in the West, China does offer an alternative to the world than Western hegemony.
This book is neatly written and kept relatively simple in the way it introduces ideas, without going into too much depth, but whetting the reader’s appetite to indulge in further research on any given topic. It is an essential book to study in order to understand why modern China is the way it is in today’s world where China’s relevance is indeed very prominent and important to all on our planet.
Profile Image for RLJ.
60 reviews3 followers
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July 18, 2025
best aardig overzichtswerk, goeie introductie aan het onderwerp. nadeel aan de opzet (chronologisch opgedeelde bundel waarin experts op bepaalde gebieden specifieke belangrijke periodes karakteriseren) is dat sommige hoofdstukken heel diep in gaan op specifieke aspecten van een bepaald tijdperk vanuit het perspectief van één groep, terwijl de rest van die periode volledig buiten beschouwing wordt gelaten. de introductie en de coda waren erg sterk.
Profile Image for Jindřich Zapletal.
227 reviews11 followers
November 5, 2024
A history of China from late Ming to very recent times, organized as essays from specialists on the different eras. It is mercifully succinct, and it cuts through the chaos of post-imperial times more efficiently than Jonathan Spence's textbook. There are many cultural references in the book; following them, in all cases I concluded that they were highly relevant and informative.

The chapters on post-cultural revolution history are more or less a history of protest. This is a terribly narrow mindset. During that time, China developed resilient legal, financial, and government system, and it turned into an industrial superpower. If you want to learn about any of these breakthroughs, this book does not offer much. This may be out of a fear of sounding like CCP propaganda arm, but the western reader is ill-served by this attitude. No learning about modern Chinese industrial geography, major industrial projects, legal handling of the special administrative zones, about the actual government system, but plenty about Falun Gong instead; is that what you want?
Profile Image for Dan.
30 reviews
February 17, 2024
This is a fine crafted selection of essays covering the last couple of hundred years of Chinese civilisation. There is a strong effort from the authors to keep an unbiased view over facts. Critical comments on foreign as well as domestic impactfull actions towards vulnerable citizens, with millions pf victims following bad decisions from political actors. Reading this helps you understand the rise of China to superpower status.
Profile Image for Justin Evans.
1,716 reviews1,144 followers
July 17, 2024
I usually fear edited collections, because the authors have relatively little at stake, and because they're the chosen experts, they often don't have the ability to communicate with ordinary people. This one was great! Most of the chapters are readable, the editors did a fantastic job, and the authors mostly managed to stay off their hobby horses and on the introductory, common reader's level. That's a higher level, btw, not a lower one.
Profile Image for Gary Rigby.
10 reviews1 follower
July 12, 2024
An excellent starting point for anyone who wants to understand modern China.
Profile Image for Rachael.
108 reviews
September 18, 2024
overly nuanced and wordy, but an impressively comprehensive take on China's extensive modern history
Profile Image for Brian.
28 reviews3 followers
May 22, 2022
Good if breezy overview of Chinese history starting with the late Ming and ending with the Xi era. Not being a trained historian I found the focus on Europeans in the Qing section a bit odd, but maybe I’m missing something. The authors are also overwhelmingly male and non-Chinese (at least based on their names) - more diversity of opinion could have added something.

Nothing new here for those already familiar with the broad contours of Chinese history, but if like me, you’re looking to refresh your knowledge, this isn’t a bad option.
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