Industrial Eden
A Chinese Capitalist Vision
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Harvard University Press
Published:30th Apr '15
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This illuminating study of the evolution of Chinese capitalism chronicles the fortunes of the Song family of North China under five successive authoritarian governments. Headed initially by Song Chuandian, who became rich by exporting hairnets to Europe and America in the early twentieth century, the family built a thriving business against long odds of rural poverty and political chaos.
A savvy political operator, Song Chuandian prospered and kept local warlords at bay, but his career ended badly when he fell afoul of the new Nationalist government. His son Song Feiqing—inspired by the reformist currents of the May Fourth Movement—developed a utopian capitalist vision that industry would redeem China from foreign imperialism and cultural backwardness. He founded the Dongya Corporation in 1932 to manufacture wool knitting yarn and for two decades steered the company through a constantly changing political landscape—the Nationalists, then Japanese occupiers, then the Nationalists again, and finally Chinese Communists. Increasingly hostile governments, combined with inflation, foreign competition, and a restless labor force, thwarted his ambition to create an “Industrial Eden.”
Brett Sheehan shows how the Song family engaged in eclectic business practices that bore the imprint of both foreign and traditional Chinese influences. Businesspeople came to expect much from increasingly intrusive states, but the position of private capitalists remained tenuous no matter which government was in control. Although private business in China was closely linked to the state, it was neither a handmaiden to authoritarianism nor a natural ally of democracy.
Sheehan deftly handles a complex subject—the changing fortunes of one family’s enterprise through five political regimes spanning more than a century. Industrial Eden is a valuable addition to the literature on business–state relations in twentieth-century China and will remain important decades to come. -- Karl Gerth, University of California, San Diego
Industrial Eden is a fascinating and important study of modern Chinese capitalism that tracks the long arc of a business family from its rise in the late-nineteenth century to the collapse of its fortunes in the 1950s. The documentary basis of the book is rich and exhaustive; no archival stone has been left unturned. The book offers a rare and revealing picture of political and economic change taking place in tandem, in alternating moments of rise and ruin. -- David Strand, Dickinson College
- Nominated for Hagley Prize in Business History 2016
- Nominated for John K. Fairbank Prize in East Asian History 2016
- Nominated for Joseph Levenson Book Prize 2017
- Nominated for Allan Sharlin Memorial Award 2016
- Nominated for Ralph Gomory Prize 2017
ISBN: 9780674967601
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
344 pages