This book offers a new perspective on Chinese urban history by exploring cities as habitable spaces. China, the worlds most populous nation, is now its newest urban society, and the pace of this unprecedented historical transformation has increased in recent decades. The contributors to this book conceptualise cities as first providing the necessities of life, and then becoming places in which the quality of life can be improved. They focus on how cities have been made secure during times of instability, how their inhabitants have consumed everything from the simplest of foods to the most expensive luxuries, and how they have been planned as ideal spaces. Drawing examples from across the country, this book offers comparisons between different cities, highlights continuities across time and spaceand in doing so may provide solutions to some of the problems that continue to affect Chinese cities today.
1. Introduction: The Habitable City in Chinese History
Toby Lincoln and Xu Tao
2. The Chinese Corpsmen in the Shanghai Volunteer Corps
Xu Tao
3. Kunming Dreaming: Hope, Change, and War in the Autobiographies of Youth in Chinas Southwest
Aaron William Moore
4. Securing the City, Securing the Nation: Militarization and Urban Police Work in Dalian, 1945-1953
Christian A. Hess
5. To See and Be Seen: Horse Racing in Shanghai, 1848-1945
Ning Jennifer Chang
6. Second Class Workers: Gender, Industry, and Locality in Workers Welfare PrlÓl