This perceptive survey of evolving British official attitudes towards 20th century China has a strong contemporary resonance at a time when an informed understanding of the People’s Republic of China as a major global power becomes increasingly important.

Gill Bennett OBE, King's College London, UK

Oliver Yule-Smith’s book breaks new ground in explaining how the culture and future trajectory of China was understood in the British Foreign Office, long before its rise crashed upon the strategic conscience of most western policymakers. This deeply researched book shows how China posed a civilisational dilemma - with much to admire in its scientific and political history, alongside a warning sign of weakness derived from a stunted version of modernisation. As a piece of scholarship, it fills a missing gap in how we understand the formation of the western strategic mind in the twentieth century.

John Bew, King's College London, UK

“Understanding British China policy has never been more important. Oliver Yule-Smith’s meticulous and deeply researched account of the ‘China Mind’ in the British Foreign Office provides vital analysis of the historical trajectory of a relationship that is still crucial today. This is powerful history with a real contemporary resonance.”

Rana Mitter, Harvard University, USA

This book is a work of British diplomatic history that illuminates how Britain’s China officials grappled with China’s changing position in international affairs during the 20th century. Arguing that the idea of a ‘rising China’ was recognised by these officials as early as the 1920s, and that they actively took steps to plan for this eventuality, Yule-Smith shows how they were guided by a strategic, long-term view of what Britain should try to achieve in its relations with China. This dilemma of how to reconcile a country that then appeared weak and disordered, with the view that it would once again return to great power, became understood in Foreign Office circles as the ‘problem of China’.

This book will challenge the idea that the concept of a ‘rising China’ did not emerge until the 1980s or later, instead asserting that a small cadre of experts were exploring what China’s return to power would mean for both the UK and the wider international order as early as the 1920s. The book brings these British China officials out of the shadows of history to ascertain how they understood China; and how they tried to define Britain’s diplomatic efforts over the course of the twentieth century. Finally, it will draw lessons from these diplomatic histories and offer some policy recommendations for modern day Anglo-Chinese relations.

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This book analyses how British China officials grappled with China’s changing position in international affairs during the 20th century.

Introduction
1. The Forging of a China Mind
2. Approaching a Modern China
3. Managing a War-torn China
4. Reconciling a Divided China
5. Understanding an Unknown, Red China
6. Worrying about an Isolated China
7. Encouraging an Opening China
8. Maintaining an Open China after Mao
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography

Les mer
This book analyses how British China officials grappled with China’s changing position in international affairs during the 20th century.
Argues that the idea of a ‘rising China’ was recognised as early as the 1920s

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781350556027
Publisert
2026-01-08
Utgiver
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
256

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Oliver Yule-Smith is the Ernest May Fellow in History & Policy at Harvard University, USA. He was previously the Ax:Son Johnson Institute for Statecraft and Diplomacy Research Fellow at the Centre for Grand Strategy in the Department for War Studies at King’s College London, UK.