HS1838: Conflict, Coercion and Mass Mobilisation in Republican China 1911-1945

School History
Department Code SHARE
Module Code HS1838
External Subject Code 100771
Number of Credits 30
Level L6
Language of Delivery English
Module Leader Dr Federica Ferlanti
Semester Double Semester
Academic Year 2013/4

Outline Description of Module

 This module investigates the formation of modern political parties in China and their respective approach to state building and mass politics. Modern Chinese politics have been dominated by the fierce political competition between the Nationalist Party and the Communist Party. The module examines China’s efforts towards state building by exploring the Nationalist and the Communist Parties’ approaches and their respective understanding of what constituted a modern nation. Central to the module will be discussion of mass mobilisation as a tool utilised by each party for securing political legitimisation and the promotion of state building. These topics are closely interconnected and central to the understanding of China’s modern political evolution. Key questions include: Why in Chinese politics has the issue of mobilising people and communities towards defined objectives been so central? To what extent did mass mobilisation allow political participation? And to what extent political struggles and mobilisation campaigns nurtured a culture of coercion and violence?

On completion of the module a student should be able to

Knowledge and Understanding:

Upon the completion of the advanced option, the typical student will be able to:

  • demonstrate a critical and systematic knowledge of modern politics in China between 1911-1949 and an understanding of pertinent historical and historiographical ideas/contexts/frameworks.
  • critically identify the main trends concerning the formation of political parties, their approach to state building, and mass mobilisation.
  • to analyse the impact of mass politics on Chinese society.
  • demonstrate a in-depth and critical understanding of a range of concepts/perspectives/debates within the appropriate secondary literature.
  • analyse key themes and issues pertaining to modern politics in China between 1911-1949 in the light of those ideas/contexts/frameworks.
  • demonstrate a critical understanding of key primary sources and their significance.

Intellectual Skills:

Upon the completion of the advanced option, the typical student will be able to:

  • identify and evaluate the nature and scope of the issues raised bythe module.
  • an ability to discuss in a critical and informed manner the history of modern politics in China between 1911-1949.
  • summarise and critically evaluate the relative merits and demerits of alternative views and interpretations about the formation and evolution of political parties in Republican China and evaluate their significance.
  • identify problems, assess evidence, and reach conclusions consistent with them on the issues of the history of modern politics in China between 1911-1949.
  • devise and sustain arguments about political conflict, state building and mass mobilisation in China through an appropriate application of sources and terminology.
  • present, accurately, succinctly and lucidly, and in written or oral form their arguments in accordance with appropriate scholarly conventions.

Discipline Specific (including practical) Skills:

Upon the completion of the advanced option, the typical student will be able to:

  • express their ideas and assessments of modern politics in China between 1911-1949.
  • discuss in a critical and informed manner the use of mass mobilisation in relation to state building and political legitimisation in China.
  • identify strengths, weaknesses, problems, and or peculiarities of alternative historical/historiographical interpretations.
  • apply a critical approach to the nature of primary sources in the assessment of historical interpretations and methodologies.
  • use and evaluate primary sources and demonstrate an appreciation of  how historians have approached them.

Transferable Skills:

Upon the completion of the option, the typical student will be able to:

  • communicate ideas and arguments effectively, whether in speech or in writing in an accurate, succinct and lucid manner.
  • formulate and justify their own arguments and conclusions about a range of issues.
  • demonstrate an ability to modify as well as to defend their own position.
  • possess a range of information technology resources to assist with information retrieval.
  • organise their own study methods and workload.
  • work as part of a team in seminar or tutorial discussions.
  • independently organise their own study methods and workload.

How the module will be delivered

The course will be taught and students will learn through

  • A series of formal lectures will introduce students to the main factual and conceptual issues to be discussed and analysed during the course
  • Seminars which are linked to lectures will concentrate on specific issues as to provide students with a  opportunity for in- depth discussion
  • Document Workshops in which primary sources are analysed will enable students to develop discipline specific methods of approaching and analysing primary historical sources

Skills that will be practised and developed

Transferable Skills:

Upon the completion of the option, the typical student will be able to:

  • communicate ideas and arguments effectively, whether in speech or in writing in an accurate, succinct and lucid manner.
  • formulate and justify their own arguments and conclusions about a range of issues.
  • demonstrate an ability to modify as well as to defend their own position.
  • possess a range of information technology resources to assist with information retrieval.
  • organise their own study methods and workload.
  • work as part of a team in seminar or tutorial discussions.
  • independently organise their own study methods and workload.

How the module will be assessed

Students will be assessed by means of a combination of one essay relating to primary sources [20%], an assessed essay [30%] and an examination paper [50%].

Course assignments:

  1. The essay relating to primary sources will contribute 20% of the final mark for the module and must be no longer than 1,000 words.
  2. The Assessed Essay will contribute 30% of the final mark for the module. It is designed to give students the opportunity to demonstrate their ability to review evidence, draw appropriate conclusions from it and employ the formal conventions of scholarly presentation. It must be no longer than 2,000 words.
  3. The Examination will take place during the second assessment period [May/June] and will consist of an unseen two hour paper that will contribute the remaining 50% of the final mark for this module. Students must write 2 answers in total.  

Assessment Breakdown

Type % Title Duration(hrs)
Exam - Spring Semester 50 Conflict, Coercion And Mass Mobilisation In Republican China 1911-1945 2
Written Assessment 20 Coursework 1 N/A
Written Assessment 30 Coursework 2 N/A

Syllabus content

Week 1. Introductory Lecture

Part I Ideas

Week 2. Sun Yat-sen: The Father of the Country (Lecture+Documents)

Week 3. Cultural Imperialism?: Anarchism, Marxism and Darwinism (Lecture+Seminar)

Week 4. State Confucianism (Lecture+Documents)

Week 5. The Making of the Republican Citizen (Lecture+Seminar)

Part II The Party and the State

Week 7. Guomindang: A Fractured Party (Lecture+Seminar)

Week 8. The Nanjing Government: Fascism in China? (Lecture+Documents)

Week 9. The Case of Wang Jingwei (Lecture + Seminar: Fascism in China?)

Week 10. The CCP: From Friends to Comrades  (Lecture+ Documents)

Week 11. The Origins of the Communist State: The First Soviet Republic of China (1931-1934) (Lecture+Documents)

Second Semester

Part III Mass Mobilisation

Week 1. Seminar: Presentations on the Xi’an Incident (December 1936)

Week 2. Student Protests during May Fourth 1919 (Lecture+Documents)

Week 3. Peasant Mobilisation in the Rural Areas (Lecture+Documents)

Week 4. Mobilisation of Youth and Women in the Rural Areas (Lecture+Documents)

Week 5. Seminar: Mobilisation in the Rural Areas

Week 7. The New Life Movement (Lecture+Documents)

Week 8. Wartime Mobilisation (Lecture+Seminar)

Week 9. Mobilisation Campaigns in Yan’an  (Lecture+ Documents)

Week 10. Seminar: Mobilisation Campaigns in Yan’an 

Week 11. Revision Class

Essential Reading and Resource List

INDICATIVE READING LIST:

Peter Zarrow, Chinain War and Revolution 1895-1949, (Routledge, 2005)

Henrietta Harrison, The Making of a Republican Citizen, (Oxford, 2000)

John Fitzgerald, Awakening China, (Stanford, 1996)

Rana Mitter, A Bitter Revolution, (Oxford, 2004)

Gregor Benton, Mountain Fires, (Berkeley, 1992)

Hans J. van de Ven, From Friend to Comrade, (Berkeley, 1991)

Hans J. van de Ven, War and Nationalism in China 1925-1945, (London, 2003)

Arif Dirlik, The Origins of Chinese Communism, (Oxford, 1989)

Mark Selden, The Yan’an Way in Revolutionary China, (Cambridge, Mass., 1971)

Jeffrey N. Wasserstrom, Student Protests in Twentieth-century China, (Stanford, 1991)

Cheng Pei-kai, Michael Lestz, Jonathan Spence, The Search for Modern China: A Documentary Collection, (New   York, London, 1999)

Tony Saich, with a contribution by Benjamin Yang Tony, The Rise to Power of the Chinese Communist Party: Documents and Analysis, (New York, 1996)


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