The Opium War: Drugs, Dreams and the Making of China
by Julia Lovell
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Details the 1839 Opium War and the red tape, incompetence, and political cronyism that surrounded China's first conflict with the West and how these events fueled the foundation for modern Chinese nationalism.Tags
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Accessible, and takes time to mention the issues behind the war. Fascinating in a horrible way really to think the British empire went to war to sell what we know of today as raw heroin and yet still manage to moralize while invading.
Particularly enjoyed a few comments on the rise of the prohibition lobby (who in many ways are still with us today, albeit in a different form) and the types of characters that championed it. I think this type of background information may well of taken up some of the space that could of been used for detail on the second opium war, but personally I think it's a sacrifice that was overall worth while to see things in some kind of context.
Particularly enjoyed a few comments on the rise of the prohibition lobby (who in many ways are still with us today, albeit in a different form) and the types of characters that championed it. I think this type of background information may well of taken up some of the space that could of been used for detail on the second opium war, but personally I think it's a sacrifice that was overall worth while to see things in some kind of context.
This book, "Opium War", by Julia Lovell, is brilliant. However, "Opium Inc." is another good companion book.
The book focuses on The First Opium War. Julia Lovell starts with a background of the Qing Empire and the steady degradation of the king. Conditions in China were unstable. The traders were making money off opium, and the courtiers routinely gave false information to the king. Conversely, you had a ravenous British Crown looking for revenue. Opium.
She covers huge ground in the book, revealing Chinese weakness, British duplicity and warmongering, and the debates that raged in England around opium.
Then, she skipped past the next wars and wrote about the fall of the Qing Empire and the rise of Chinese Nationalism and its memory of show more the wars.
The Chinese have long memories, and, as she says, the memories of the Century of Humiliation live on in China.
An excellent book, one for the keeping. show less
The book focuses on The First Opium War. Julia Lovell starts with a background of the Qing Empire and the steady degradation of the king. Conditions in China were unstable. The traders were making money off opium, and the courtiers routinely gave false information to the king. Conversely, you had a ravenous British Crown looking for revenue. Opium.
She covers huge ground in the book, revealing Chinese weakness, British duplicity and warmongering, and the debates that raged in England around opium.
Then, she skipped past the next wars and wrote about the fall of the Qing Empire and the rise of Chinese Nationalism and its memory of show more the wars.
The Chinese have long memories, and, as she says, the memories of the Century of Humiliation live on in China.
An excellent book, one for the keeping. show less
excellent book about the opium war, it has complete maps and exciting story-telling. It is well-written and very informative.
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Author Information

9+ Works 1,000 Members
Julia Lovell is an author, translator, and academic. She is the author of the widely acclaimed The Great Wall: China Against the World 1000 BC-AD 2000, which was published in eighteen countries. She has translated many key Chinese works into English, including Lust, Caution by Eileen Chang, The Complete Fiction of Lu Xun, and Serve the People by show more Yan Lianke. She is a lecturer m modern Chinese history and literature at the University of London and writes for the Guardian, The Times, the Economist, and the Times Literary Supplement. She spends a large part of the year in China with her family. show less
Awards and Honors
Common Knowledge
- Original title
- The Opium War
- Original publication date
- 2011
- Important places
- China
- Important events
- First Opium War (1840 | 1842); Second Opium War (1856 | 1860)
- Canonical DDC/MDS
- 951.033
- Canonical LCC
- DS757.5
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 395
- Popularity
- 79,135
- Reviews
- 3
- Rating
- (3.90)
- Languages
- Chinese, English, French, Italian
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 14
- UPCs
- 1
- ASINs
- 5




























































