Archives of the Afterlife: The Disappearance of the British Empire's Dead in Twentieth-Century China.

IF 1.3 Omega Pub Date : 2025-01-08 DOI:10.1177/00302228241312960
Linh D Vu
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Abstract

For a century, from the First Opium War (1839-1842) to the beginning of the Second World War (1937-1945) in China, cemeteries were established in many Chinese cities for the growing population of foreign dead, the majority of whom were British citizens. However, the retreat of the British Empire, the Chinese Civil War (1946-1949), and the People's Republic of China's desire for growth affected British necropolises. This article shows that despite the compassion and efforts of the Foreign Office and consular staff, bureaucratic hurdles and established legal precedents made it impossible to protect British cemeteries, especially after the destruction of the Cultural Revolution (1966-1976). Diving into the archives of the afterlife of the British Empire's dead, we learn how dead bodies continue to matter greatly in the distant memories of living relatives, in the secularized bureaucratic exchanges, and in the diplomatic power play.

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后世档案:大英帝国亡灵在20世纪中国的消失。
从第一次鸦片战争(1839-1842)到第二次世界大战开始(1937-1945)的一个世纪里,中国许多城市都为不断增长的外国死者建立了墓地,其中大多数是英国公民。然而,大英帝国的撤退、中国内战(1946-1949)和中华人民共和国对增长的渴望影响了英国的墓地。这篇文章表明,尽管外交部和领事人员的同情和努力,官僚主义障碍和既定的法律先例使英国墓地无法得到保护,特别是在文化大革命(1966-1976)的破坏之后。深入研究大英帝国死者死后的档案,我们了解到,在遥远的亲属记忆中,在世俗化的官僚交流中,在外交权力游戏中,尸体是如何继续发挥重要作用的。
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