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Saving the Nation: Chinese Protestant Elites and the Quest to Build a New China, 1922-1952

Autor Thomas H. Reilly
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 17 noi 2020
While Protestant Christians made up only a small percentage of China's overall population during the Republican period, they were heavily represented among the urban elite. Protestant influence was exercised through churches, hospitals, and schools, and reached beyond these institutions into organizations such as the YMCA (Young Men's Christian Association) and YWCA (Young Women's Christian Association). The YMCA's city associations drew their membership from the urban elite and were especially influential within the modern sectors of urban society.Chinese Protestant leaders adapted the social message and practice of Christianity to the conditions of the republican era. Key to this effort was their belief that Christianity could save China — that is, that Christianity could be more than a religion focused on saving individuals, but could also save a people, a society, and a nation. Saving the Nation recounts the history of the Protestant elite beginning with their participation in social reform campaigns in the early twentieth century, continuing through their contribution to the resistance against Japanese imperialism, and ending with Protestant support for a social revolution.The story Thomas Reilly tells is one about the Chinese Protestant elite and the faith they adopted and adapted, Social Christianity. But it is also a broader story about the Chinese people and their struggle to strengthen and renew their nation — to build a New China.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780190929503
ISBN-10: 0190929502
Pagini: 264
Dimensiuni: 239 x 160 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Recenzii

This is a timely study for historians of Christianity and modern China... Reilly' emphasis on Protestant elites tied to the establishment is a helpful counterbalance to the many recent studies of popular or lesser known Chinese Christianities by the likes of Arrington, Christie Chow, Inouye, Ireland, Kilcourse, and Woodbridge.
This book on Chinese Social Christianity fills a significant gap in the mission history of the Republican period. The historical background and organizational development are intertwined with lively and passionate figures who love China and God, albeit as complex characters.
This book is a fine introduction to the importance of the Chinese Protestant urban elite. Reilly has provided a solid foundation for understanding the impact of Chinese Protestant elite at a pivotal moment in modern China, and makes a strong case for their inclusion in the study of both the Church in China and China's twentieth-century story.
this book provides a solid basis for future studies of social Christianity in China, and it will be of great value to scholars interested in the history of Christianity in China and global history of social Christianity
This is a thoughtful history of the role of the Chinese Protestant elite in the struggle to build a new nation during the critical years from 1922 through 1952... Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.
Thomas Reilly brilliantly demonstrates how Chinese leaders of the YMCA and the Protestant elite argued the case for national salvation, citizenship, and resistance against Japanese aggression...Saving the Nation has great appeal and significance for scholars and students of Chinese Christianity and modern Chinese history.
This radical, opinionated, and immensely energetic account of early twentieth century American missionaries and Chinese Christians from the urban elite is a strongly argued defense of their contributions to Chinese society and the Chinese nation state. The subject matter ranges from YMCA campaigns against child labor to the dramatic story of an American woman missionary struggling to rescue young women during the Rape of Nanjing. It will compel many readers to rethink their assumptions.
With vivid detail, this book tells the story of people and institutions caught up in the encounter between Western social gospel Christianity and a China in the throes of war and revolution in the first half of the 20th century...This book will be of value not only to historians, but to social scientists and theologians - all who look for meaning in the fraught history of Sino-Western relations.
By giving voice to a diversity of actors embedded in the industrialized social context of Shanghai, this book shows how Christianity was adopted and made local by the Chinese agents and contributed to the emergence of a Republican Chinese civil society, thus shattering the image of Christianity in China as culturally alien.

Notă biografică

Thomas H. Reilly is Professor of Chinese History at Pepperdine University.