Total war: Military supply and civilian resources during China’s era of rebellions.

Elisabeth Kaske (SFB 1199, Leipzig U)

Publication Date

October 2017

Publisher

Routledge

Language

English

Type

Book Chapter

Edited Volume

Chinese and Indian Warfare – From the Classical Age to 1870

Editor

Kaushik Roy, Peter Lorge

Pages

257-289

Additional Information

Abstract

This book examines the differences and similarities between warfare in China and India before 1870, both conceptually and on the battlefield. By focusing on Chinese and Indian warfare, the book breaks the intellectual paradigm requiring non-Western histories and cultures to be compared to the West, and allows scholarship on two of the oldest civilizations to be brought together. An international group of scholars compare and contrast the modes and conceptions of warfare in China and India, providing important original contributions to the growing study of Asian military history.

Biographical Note

Elisabeth Kaske (SFB 1199, Leipzig University, Germany)

Elisabeth Kaske has joined Leipzig University as professor of modern Chinese society and culture in April 2017, after studying and teaching in Berlin, Beijing, Heidelberg, Frankfurt, Boston, Vienna, Pittsburgh, Taipei, and Princeton. As a historian of late Qing and early Republican China she is interested in China’s rugged path towards modernization. Her studies include the history of German-Chinese military exchange and technology transfer, the emergence of new concepts of language and education, the sale of rank and public office by the late imperial state, and the fiscal regime of the Qing dynasty. After having long focused on bureaucratic elites, she has recently become fascinated with how new professional elites, particularly engineers, imagined the nation and their own role in it.