Book Details

Chinese Medicine Men : Consumer Culture in China and Southeast Asia
Cochran brings to light enduring features of the Chinese experience with consumer culture. Surveying the period between the 1880s and the 1950s, he observes that Chinese businesses surpassed their Western counterparts in capturing Chinese and Southeast Asian sales of medicine in both peacetime and wartime. He provides revealing examples of Chinese entrepreneurs’ dealings with Chinese and Japanese political and military leaders, particularly during the Sino–Japanese War of 1937–45. The history of Chinese medicine men in pre-socialist China, he suggests, has relevance for the twenty-first century because they achieved goals—constructing a consumer culture, competing with Western-based corporations, forming business-government alliances, capturing national and transnational markets—that their successors in contemporary China are currently seeking to attain.
List of Illustrations
1 Consumer Culture in Chinese History
2 Inventing Imperial Traditions and Building Olde Shoppes
3 Advertising Dreams
4 Capturing a National Borders
5 Crossing Enemy Lines
6 Crossing National Borders
7 Agents of Consumer Culture
Abbreviations Used in Notes
Notes
Archives
Work Cited
List of Illustration Credits
Index

CULTURE IN ACTION : FAMILY LIFE, EMOTION, AND MALE DOMINANCE IN BANARAS (HC)

SHARING THE LIGHT : REPRESENTATIONS OF WOMEN AND VIRTUE IN EARLY CHINA

GENDER AND PARENTHOOD : BIOLOGICAL AND SOCIAL SCIENTIFIC PERSPECTIVES
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