Lexington Books
Pages: 428
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-4985-3168-9 • Hardback • December 2016 • $143.00 • (£110.00)
978-1-4985-3169-6 • eBook • December 2016 • $135.50 • (£105.00)
Nicolas Schillinger is lecturer at the Institute of China Studies at the Free University of Berlin.
Chapter 1: Forging the Male Body: Drill in the New Armies
Chapter 2: Body, Space, and Daily Life
Chapter 3: Dressed to Kill: Uniforms, Masculinity, and Military Culture
Chapter 4: Making Real Men: Military Professionalism and Martial Spirit
Chapter 5: All Men Are Soldiers: Citizenship and Military Service
Chapter 6: School Reforms and the Education of Citizen-Soldiers
Nicholas Schillinger’s The Body and Military Masculinity in Late Qing and Early Republican China is a welcome additionto the burgeoning field of military gender and cultural analysis thatgives the reader a nuanced and lively account of how military organizationsshape an understanding of “the body” in the pursuit of power.
— Nan Nü: Men, Women and Gender in China
It is conventional to view the Qing dynasty’s attempt to reform the Chinese military at the turn of the last century as a failure. Nicolas Schillinger demonstrates that this limited view misses a much more far-reaching legacy. New values such as martial masculinity, self-sacrifice for the nation, and patriotism were linked with new ways of dressing, moving, training, and caring for the body. The result was nothing less than a total transformation of men, gender, social hierarchy, and national identity which was absolutely central to China’s modernization. Schillinger’s creative and thorough examination of a wide range of historical sources enables him to portray the history of the construction of a new image of man—an image that still has relevance in today’s China.
— Susan Brownell, University of Missouri–St. Louis
In imperial China, common sayings such as ‘good men do not become soldiers’ reflect the common perception that military service was a lowly occupation. In this remarkable book, Nicholas Schillinger expertly recounts how reformist political leaders at the late Qing and early Republic transition advocated the incorporation of Western (mainly German and Japanese) methods to cultivate a new ideal of the ‘citizen-soldier.’ Schillinger’s impressive and meticulous scholarship about the formation of modern ideas of the Chinese soldier is compelling reading. The book sheds much light not just on military topics, but on issues of masculinity, cultural contact and nation building.
— Kam Louie, University of Hong Kong and University of New South Wales
In The Body and Military Masculinity in Late Qing and Early Republican China, Nicolas Schillinger offers a definitive account of an important yet hitherto little explored topic: how did the disciplined male body associated with the modern nation come to China? With an unusual richness in data and insight, the book examines the appropriation of European physical culture instigated by the late nineteenth and early twentieth-century military reforms in China. This study is a splendid contribution to the study of nationalism, modernity, and masculinity in the Chinese context.
— Geng Song, Associate Professor of China Studies, University of Hong Kong
Nicolas Schillinger’s study deepens our knowledge of this crucial period of Chinese military history and Chinese civil-military relations.
— Journal of Chinese Military History