Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 November 2008
With the climax of imperialism in China at the end of the nineteenth century, Chinese nationalism in its modern form grew rapidly and became ever more assertive. As the imperialists concentrated on economic gains, the frustrated nationalists gave increasing attention to economic defences. The prime target of the imperialists was the control of mining and railway construction in different areas; so ‘to resist the imperialists’ became the catchword of the day, and the movement for recovering mining and railway construction rights highlighted the development of Chinese economic nationalism. While revolutionaries and the fugitive reformers abroad worked out their political programmes for the salvation of China, the conservative Manchu government and scholar-gentry tried to resist imperialism by promoting economic nationalism. To recover the mining and railway rights, to find the alternative capital for economic modernization and to play one power against another, became the strategic aims of economic nationalism.
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32 Michael Godley claims that Chang Yu-nan was Chang Pi-shih's cousin, but I am doubtful on this point. Although both were Hakka and carrying the same surname, Chang Pi-shih was a Tapu Hakka (the Hakka from Tapu district), whereas Chang Yu-nan was a Hakka from Mei district. The English word ‘cousin’ loosely includes both paternal and maternal sides of cousin. Chang Yu-nan could not be Chang Pi-shih's paternal cousin because he came from a different district and spoke a slightly different Hakka dialect; he could not be Pi-shih's maternal cousin either, because his maternal aunts were unlikely to marry someone in a distant district. See Godley, M. R., ‘Chang Pi-shih and Nanyang Chinese Involvement in South China's Railroads’, p. 21Google Scholar; also Godley, , The Mandarin-Capitalists from Nanyang, p. 150.Google Scholar
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35 For instance, the interpreter Tai P'ei-yuan and secretary Li Kuang-hsi were recommended by the Chinese minister in London, Liu Yu-lin, for awards in 1911 after their three years’ service in the Penang Vice Consulate. See ‘Tsung-li ke-kuo shih-wu ya-men ch'ing tang’ (Tsungli Yamen Archives, Clean file), the mission of Liu Yu-lin in the 3rd year of Hsuan-t'ung.
36 In a dialogue with the Empress-Dowager Tz'u-hsi when he was given an audience in 1903, Chang Yu-nan mentioned that he had contributed to various relief funds in China. The dialogue was published in the Thien Nan Shin Pao, 22/12/1903.
37 See ‘Memorial of T'ao Mo, the Governor-General of Liang Kuang, to the court recommending awards of Chang Yu-nan and Chou Yung-yao’, in Yu-chi hui-ts'un (Collected Records of Imperial Decrees and Memorials) (Taipei, 1967, reprint), Vol 43, 6th moon of 28th year of Kuang-hsu (07 1902), pp. 17a–17b.Google Scholar
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44 Ibid., Vol. 1, pp. 28–31, Vol. 4.
45 Ibid., Vol. 1, ‘Preface’.
46 Ibid.
47 The concern of overseas Chinese nationalists for China's loss of mining and railway rights was frequently aired in local Chinese newspapers. See, for instances, Thien Nan Shin Pao's editorials on 6/11/1903, p. 2, 18/11/1903, p. 2.Google Scholar
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63 Chang's doubt was probably well grounded. For the ‘Merchant Protection Bureau’ which was set up by the central government in Fukien and Kwangtung provinces in 1889 and 1900 for the protection of returned overseas Chinese merchants, failed to render any protection. In fact it was even used to exploit returned overseas Chinese. A petition from the Chinese merchants of Penang, Singapore and Luzon was sent to the Ministry of Commerce in 1902 to that effect. We do not know whether Chang Yu-nan was involved in the petition or not, but it can be certain that he must have known about it. For details of the petition, see Ta-Ch'ing kuang-hsu hsin fa-ling (New Statutes of the Great Ch'ing Empire during the Kuang-hsu Reign), Vol. 16, pp. 56–7.Google Scholar Part of the petition is also found in Kuang-hsu-ch'ao tung-hua lu, 11th moon of 29th year, Vol. 5, pp. 129–30.Google Scholar For a discussion on the failure of the ‘Merchant Protection Bureau’, see Yen Ching-hwang, ‘China's Overseas Chinese Policy under the Ch'ing’, (forthcoming) Ch. 7.
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