<span>From its rise in the 1830s to its pinnacle in the 1930s, the opium trade was a guiding force in the Chinese political economy. Opium money was inextricably bound up in local, national, and imperial finances, and the people who piloted the trade were integral to the fabric of Chinese society. I
The Opium Business: A History of Crime and Capitalism in Maritime China
β Scribed by Peter Thilly
- Publisher
- Stanford University Press
- Year
- 2022
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 312
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
From its rise in the 1830s to its pinnacle in the 1930s, the opium trade was a guiding force in the Chinese political economy. Opium money was inextricably bound up in local, national, and imperial finances, and the people who piloted the trade were integral to the fabric of Chinese society. In this book, Peter Thilly narrates the dangerous lives and shrewd business operations of opium traffickers in southeast China, situating them within a global history of capitalism. By tracing the evolution of the opium trade from clandestine offshore agreements in the 1830s, to multi-million dollar prohibition bureau contracts in the 1930s, Thilly demonstrates how the modernizing Chinese state was infiltrated, manipulated, and profoundly transformed by opium profiteers. Opium merchants carried the drug by sea, over mountains, and up rivers, with leading traders establishing monopolies over trade routes and territories and assembling "opium armies" to protect their businesses. Over time, and as their ranks grew, these organizations became more bureaucratized and militarized, mimickingβand then eventually influencing, infiltrating, or supplantingβthe state. Through the chaos of revolution, warlordism, and foreign invasion, opium traders diligently expanded their power through corruption, bribery, and direct collaboration with the state. Drug traders matteredβnot only in the seedy ways in which they have been caricatured but also crucially as shadowy architects of statecraft and China's evolution on the world stage.
β¦ Table of Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Note on Currency and Exchange Rates
Map
Introduction: The Opium Business in Chinese and World History
1. Local Foundations, 1832β1839
2. Negotiated Illegality, 1843β1860
3. Drug Money and the Fiscal-Military State, 1857β1906
4. βOpium Kingsβ and Tax Farmers in the Age of Prohibition, 1906β1938
5. New Spatialities in the Global Drug Trade, 1890sβ1940s
6. Opium and the Frontier of Japanese Power in South China, 1895β1945
Conclusion: Following the Money, Today and in the Past
Glossary of Chinese Names, Places, and Terms
Notes
References
Index
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