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“Begging the Sages of the Party-State”: Citizenship and Government in Transition in Nationalist China, 1927– 1937

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 December 2001

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Abstract

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The premise of the Nationalist government at Nanjing (1927–1937) rested on a precarious balance of democracy and paternalism. The Nationalists drew their power from China's citizens, but they also subjected them to a regimen of training and control. Petitions from the “Nanjing decade” highlight the resulting tensions between government and the governed. Citizens from all walks of life accepted the ruling party's invitation to participate in the construction of the republic. Yet they also used petitions to seek redress when they believed the Nationalists had fallen short of their obligations. These documents mark a turbulent period of transition from imperial rule to representative democracy. They also characterize an era when new political ideas, new media, and new social organizations helped people take an old device and transform it into a useful weapon for asserting their rights as modern citizens.

Type
Technical Article
Copyright
© 2001 Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis