Abstract

It is over twenty-five years since Albert Feuerwerker wrote his survey of modern Chinese economic history as it is studied in China.1 For the first fifteen of those years, the only changes from the picture he painted were towards an even more deadening orthodoxy and an almost complete drying-up of publication. Since 1978, however, the writing of modern Chinese economic history has been transformed along with the rest of Chinese society. New concerns and issues have emerged to complement, though not entirely replace, those discussed by Feuerwerker; new methodologies are at least discussed and in general a much broader range of opinions allowed.2

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