不偏不倚的帝国:十八世纪中国的外债管理

IF 1.7 1区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY
Meng Zhang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

近期的学术研究强调了商业信贷在欧洲帝国扩张过程中创造从属条件方面的作用,而商业信贷往往以国家权力为后盾。但人们较少关注对等国家如何理解和处理这种债务,从而错失了了解私人信贷与帝国建设之间其他互动模式的机会。本文研究了十八世纪清帝国处理外部对负债中国商人指控的框架。我强调将中西和亚洲内部案例纳入单一分析框架的重要性,以反映清帝国处理海洋边疆的综合方法。在这些案例中,清朝皇帝出面帮助外国人收回资金,甚至在万不得已的情况下承担无约束的责任。支撑这些做法的是清朝帝国形成的一个基本原则:皇帝对普世主权的主张取决于他对 "内外 "的最大公正性--这对对比的基础是不断变化的相对性而非固定的领土性。本研究强调了理解一个帝国如何想象和管理它所统治或遇到的不同人群之间不同的相互构成模式以及它在全球历史中的政治经济实际参数的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Empire of Impartiality: Managing Indebtedness to Foreigners in Eighteenth-Century China
Recent scholarship highlights the role of commercial credit, often backed by the power of the state, in creating conditions of subordination in the expansion of European empires. Less attention has been paid to how such indebtedness was understood and handled by the counterpart states, thereby missing the opportunity to appreciate other modes of interaction between private credit and imperial construction. This article investigates the framework under which the eighteenth-century Qing empire dealt with accusations brought against indebted Chinese merchants by external parties. I stress the importance of bringing Sino-Western and intra-Asian cases into a single analytic frame to reflect the Qing empire’s comprehensive approach to the maritime frontier. In these cases, the Qing emperor intervened to help foreigners recover their funds and even assumed unbound liability as a last resort. Buttressing such practices was a foundational principle of the Qing imperial formation: that the emperor’s claim to universal sovereignty rested upon his utmost impartiality toward the ‘inner and outer’ – a contrasting pair based on shifting relativity rather than fixed territoriality. This study highlights the importance of understanding the different modes of mutual constitution between how an empire imagined and managed different groups of people it ruled over or encountered and the practical parameters of its political economy in global history.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
5.30%
发文量
28
期刊介绍: Journal of Global History addresses the main problems of global change over time, together with the diverse histories of globalization. It also examines counter-currents to globalization, including those that have structured other spatial units. The journal seeks to transcend the dichotomy between "the West and the rest", straddle traditional regional boundaries, relate material to cultural and political history, and overcome thematic fragmentation in historiography. The journal also acts as a forum for interdisciplinary conversations across a wide variety of social and natural sciences. Published for London School of Economics and Political Science
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