
Towards the end of the nineteenth century the British Empire was confronted by two great Chinese questions. The first of these questions (often known as the 'Far Eastern question') related specifically to the maintenance of British interests on the China Coast and the broader implications for British foreign policy in East Asia. While safeguarding British interests in the Far East presented British policymakers with a range of significant challenges, as they wrestled with this first Chinese question, another question kept knocking at the door. Since the eighteenth century, when plans for the establishment of a British colony at New South Wales had begun to materialize, Australia's potential relations with China had attracted considerable interest. During the first sixty years of European settlement, China retained a prominent place in both metropolitan and colonial schemes for the development of British Australia. From the 1850s, however, when large numbers of Cantonese miners travelled to the Pacific gold rushes, these earlier visions began to appear hopelessly naive. By the late 1880s the coming of the Chinese to Australia, and the reaction to their arrival, had developed into one of the most difficult issues within British imperial affairs. This book sets out to tell that story. Reaching back to the arrival of the British in the 1780s, it explores the early history of Australian engagement with China and traces the development of colonial Australia into an important point of contact between the British and Chinese Empires.
This book investigates how the evolving relationship between the British Empire, China, and colonial Australia shaped imperial policy and domestic social tensions during the nineteenth century. Benjamin Mountford, a historian specializing in imperial and global history, utilizes archival records and diplomatic correspondence to argue that the migration of Chinese laborers to Australian goldfields transformed a peripheral colonial concern into a central crisis of British imperial governance. The work frames this development as a collision between early colonial aspirations for trade and the later, more restrictive racial and political policies that defined the late Victorian era.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and historians recognize this monograph as a rigorous contribution to the study of imperial networks and colonial migration. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the author's meticulous use of primary sources to connect disparate geographical regions within the British Empire.
Page Count:
316
Publication Date:
2016-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0192507818
ISBN-13:
9780192507815
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