Russia, China, and the universalism of modernity: the “Account of the Reforms of Peter the Great” by Kang Youwei

Brusadelli F (2020)


Publication Type: Journal article

Publication year: 2020

Journal

DOI: 10.1080/17535654.2020.1763666

Abstract

This paper analyzes a short essay by Kang Youwei (1858–1927)–one of the intellectual and political protagonists of late imperial and early Republican China. In it, he interpreted the historical experience of Russian modernization under Peter the Great (1672–1725) and used it as a “success story” for the renewal of Chinese monarchical institutions. It was written in 1898 and presented to the Manchu throne under the title “Account of the Reforms of Peter the Great”, and for our purposes will be the departing point for a “global intellectual circuit” through which the following questions will be addressed: Why was seventeenth and eighteenth century Russia considered as a model for China by the author? How did he manage to adapt the historical experience of Russia into a social and political conceptual framework for China? What was Kang’s historiographical method, and what kind of philosophy of history framed his reflections? What does this short essay tell us about Kang’s view on “Westernization”, on the concept of “modernity” itself, and on its use for historiographical purposes?.

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How to cite

APA:

Brusadelli, F. (2020). Russia, China, and the universalism of modernity: the “Account of the Reforms of Peter the Great” by Kang Youwei. Journal of Modern Chinese History. https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17535654.2020.1763666

MLA:

Brusadelli, Federico. "Russia, China, and the universalism of modernity: the “Account of the Reforms of Peter the Great” by Kang Youwei." Journal of Modern Chinese History (2020).

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