The sedan chair vs the steamboat: The Sichuan route and the maritime route in the making of modern Sino-Tibetan relations (Record no. 520542)

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008 - FIXED-LENGTH DATA ELEMENTS--GENERAL INFORMATION
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100 ## - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name Zhang, Huashavv
245 ## - TITLE STATEMENT
Title The sedan chair vs the steamboat: The Sichuan route and the maritime route in the making of modern Sino-Tibetan relations
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC. (IMPRINT)
Place of publication, distribution, etc Modern Asian Studies
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Extent 56(1), Jan, 2022: p.269-308
520 ## - SUMMARY, ETC.
Summary, etc This article tells the intertwined tales of two historical routes that testify to the extensive geographical distance and profound political connections between Tibet and China throughout the modern era. In much of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the Sichuan Route operated as the transportation artery upon which the Qing empire depended to maintain authority in Kham and Tibet. It was also the site of a rite of passage for frontier functionaries and a meeting ground between imperial agents and the indigenous population. Despite its destruction after the implosion of the Qing in 1911, the histories and memories of the Sichuan Route continued to influence decision-makers in both China and Tibet in the following decades. The Maritime Route, which emerged in the late nineteenth century with the proliferation of steam transportation in Asia, revolutionized the way in which Tibet connected to China and the rest of the world. It also competed with the Sichuan Route and encouraged the Qing to reconfigure its presence in its non-Chinese territories in the southwest. After the empire fell, political tensions continued to evolve around the Maritime Route, which functioned simultaneously as the reluctant choice of Chinese emissaries and a strategic tool that the Lhasa government wielded to curtail China's influence. Through an exploration of the Sichuan Route and the Maritime Route on the levels of experience and representation, this article sketches the two routes’ troubled interconnections with each other and with every twist and turn in Sino-Tibetan relations from the eighteenth to the twentieth centuries. – Reproduced
773 ## - HOST ITEM ENTRY
Main entry heading Modern Asian Studies
906 ## - LOCAL DATA ELEMENT F, LDF (RLIN)
Subject DIP INDIA - FOREIGN RELATIONS - TIBET
942 ## - ADDED ENTRY ELEMENTS (KOHA)
Item type Articles
Holdings
Withdrawn status Lost status Source of classification or shelving scheme Damaged status Not for loan Permanent location Current location Date acquired Serial Enumeration / chronology Barcode Date last seen Koha item type
          Indian Institute of Public Administration Indian Institute of Public Administration 2022-09-19 56(1), Jan, 2022: p.269-308 AR127127 2022-09-19 Articles

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