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Dance with the Dragon, A
 
 

Dance with the Dragon, A [Kindle Edition]

Julia Boyd
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Review

Julia Boyd tells the fascinating tale of the foreign community surviving in Peking between the end of the Ching Dynasty and Mao s communist revolution. It is a great story very well told - turmoil behind, turmoil ahead and turmoil all around. --Chris Patten, Chancellor of Oxford University, Chairman of the BBC and former Governor of Hong Kong

Based on a treasure-trove of original sources, this book gives an enthralling insight into the expatriate community in Peking during the half-century before the triumph of Mao. Anyone who wants to understand China's relationship with foreigners, today as well as yesterday, should read it. --Piers Brendon, author of The Decline and Fall of the British Empire

A fascinating account sourced from many previously unpublished letters and archives. Boyd's characters flit on the surface of the city like water beetles, unaware of the depths below. --Frances Wood, Curator of Chinese Collections, British Library, author of China's First Emperor and His Terracotta Warriors.

'...with its fresh insights into this historic non-meeting of minds, [A Dance With the Dragon] appears at an opportune moment.' --Literary Review

A fascinating account sourced from many previously unpublished letters and archives. Boyd's characters flit on the surface of the city like water beetles, unaware of the depths below. --Frances Wood, Curator of Chinese Collections, British Library, author of China's First Emperor and His Terracotta Warriors.

'Boyd s volume stands alone as a valuable history of our foreign predecessors, but also offers a healthy reminder of the responsibilities incumbent upon those who make China their home.' --Asian Review of Books

A fascinating account sourced from many previously unpublished letters and archives. Boyd's characters flit on the surface of the city like water beetles, unaware of the depths below. --Frances Wood, Curator of Chinese Collections, British Library, author of China's First Emperor and His Terracotta Warriors.

'It is as much a glimpse of a corner of the fashionable intellectual life of Europe and America in exile as it is a guide to the vanished world of Peking itself.' --Asian Affairs

A fascinating account sourced from many previously unpublished letters and archives. Boyd's characters flit on the surface of the city like water beetles, unaware of the depths below. --Frances Wood, Curator of Chinese Collections, British Library, author of China's First Emperor and His Terracotta Warriors.

Product Description

With its wild, dissolute, extravagant group of fossil hunters and philosophers, diplomats, dropouts, writers and explorers, missionaries, artists and refugees, Peking’s foreign community in the early 20th century was as exotic as the city itself. Always a magnet for larger than life individuals, Peking attracted characters as diverse as Reginald Johnston (tutor to the last emperor), Bertrand Russell, Pierre Loti, Rabrindranath Tagore, Sven Hedin, Peter Fleming, Wallis Simpson and Cecil Lewis. The last great capital to remain untouched by the modern world, Peking both entranced and horrified its foreign residents - the majority of whom lived cocooned inside the legation quarter, their own walled enclave, living an extraordinary high-octane party lifestyle, suffused with martinis, jazz piano and cigarettes, at the height of the Jazz Age. Ignoring the poverty outside their gates, they danced, played and squabbled among themselves, oblivious to the great political events unfolding around them and the storm clouds looming on the horizon that were to shape modern China. Others, more sensitive to Peking’s cultural riches, discovered their paradise too late when it already stood on the brink of destruction.Although few in number, Peking's expatriates were uniquely placed to chart the political upheavals - from Boxer Rebellion in 1900 to the Communist victory of 1949 – that shaped modern China. Through extensive use of unpublished diaries and letters, Julia Boyd reveals the foreigner's perceptions and reactions - their take on everyday life and the unforgettable events that occurred around them. This is a dazzling portrait of an eclectic foreign community and of China itself - a magnificent confection, never before told.

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 2000 KB
  • Print Length: 288 pages
  • Publisher: IB Tauris (30 May 2012)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B0088464P0
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • X-Ray: Not Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #232,084 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating and readable overview 24 April 2013
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
I was drawn to this book, having just read Paul French's brief series of portraits of 1920's and 1930's Beijing, 'Badlands'. He rather sniffily mentions Julia Boyd's 'Dance with the Dragon' as being 'worth mentioning' , which is a double-edged comment - so I decided to buy the Kindle edition.

The book describes Peiping (= Beijing when it was no longer the capital; 'jing' = 'capital' in chinese, thus Beijing = northern capital and Nanjing = southern capital) from around 1900 to 1949 - in other words, from the time of the Boxer rebellion until the internment of foreign nationals after Pearl Harbour and the end of the war, and up to the Revolution/Mao's reconquest of Beijing. It particularly describes the jeunesse doree (gilded youth) life of foreigners in a city which was no longer the capital, where the country was falling apart, firstly under warlordism and then under Japanese incursions, and where foreigners were isolated (or isolated themselves) from chinese society.
This book provides an excellent, if at times superficial, review of the decades of the first half of the last century of the expat Beijing community. Superficial, in that there is little mention of the different factions of the Manchu court during the Boxer rebellion; little or no discussion of the murder of Pamela Werner (for which see Paul French's excellent 'Midnight in Beijing'); little discussion of one of the most fascinating characters of the period, Edmund Backhouse; and little in-depth discussion of why what was going on politically was happening.Julia Boyd writes in an easy style and this book is readable. Nevertheless, I've only awarded it four stars because, apart from the above, she relies too much on her American sources (the US was only one of the eight foreign powers and, at that time, not the most important). Rather more critically, she often quotes at length vignettes of female American expats whose lives are of less immediate interest; and I couldn't help feeling that there was a hidden feminist agenda, i.e. look at the day-to-day lives of these (US) women, whereas she writes little on the areas I've mentioned above. This is a pity, because while her sources give a lively and fresh view of Beijing, the book omits the more important events that were happening. Maybe Julia Boyd would argue that this is the purpose of her book, simply to give a portrait of the daily lives of the foreign community in their isolated and gilded bubble; in which case, it succeeds admirably.
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Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
This book offers a fascinating and well-written account of the foreign community living and surviving in Peking (Beijing) between the end of the Qing Dynasty and Mao’s communist revolution in 1949. It is a story full of detailed descriptions of people and places, and provides not only a highly readable history of China at the time but also an insight into the relationship between the expatriate community and the Chinese. Well worth reading.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating 24 Dec 2012
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
Julia Boyd has brought to life in a most accessible way the extraordinary collection of people from all walks of life and a variety of nationalities who made up the expatriate community in China in the years between the death of the Last Empress and the Communist Revolution in 1949. Adventurers, refugees from Bolshevism, cranks, charlatans and frauds (Sir Edmund Backhouse not the least of these), mystical priests like Pierre Teilhard de Chardin and acute observers of a vanished world like Daniele Varè make up the cast of characters and they tell a fascinating story. Anyone with an interest in China as it begins to play a more significant role in world affairs should read this most enjoyable and illuminating book.
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