Author: Zhang, Angela M.

Ignorant gaze : George Macartney's negotiation with China in 1793
Date2010
Publish_locationVancouver, BC
PublisherUniversity of British Columbia
CollectionRicci Institute Library
Edition
LanguageEnglish
Record_typeThesis/Dissertation (PDF)
Series
ShelfDigital Archives
Call NumberDS708.Z633 2010d
Descriptiondig.pdf. [ix, 71 p. : color ill.]
NoteIgnorant gaze : George Macartney's negotiation with China in 1793 [electronic resource] / by Angela M. Zhang.
Thesis (M.A.)--Art history, University of British Columbia.
Bibliography: p. 66-71.

Preserved in the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich, the kesi (silk tapestry) of the British Embassy has been exhibited in the context of Europe’s economic, cultural and exploitative encounters with the Americas, Africa and Asia. The kesi, which has contributed to the misinterpretation of China’s practice of foreign relations, provides invaluable insight into the political strategies of the Qianlong Emperor in the face of British imperialism. The work commemorates the infamous meeting between the Emperor and the English ambassador George Macartney in 1793. The event marks the failed negotiation between two incommensurable power systems due to conflicting interests and grave misunderstandings on both sides. Yet in English and Chinese language histories, the failed negotiation is often attributed to the backwardness of China’s practice of foreign relations. Within the context of historical writing and museum display, the kesi is made to emphasize the Emperor’s cultural blindness and ignorance of the changing world beyond China. A closer reading of the kesi will reveal that its image and inscription integrates the zhigong tu genre (the official documentation of China’s foreign relations) and li (the guiding principle of China’s foreign relations). I will argue that the emperor employed the zhigong tu genre and li to assert the power of the Qing Empire and divert his criticism of British imperialism. Pictorially the kesi follows the power structuring process of li by emphasizing the contingent relationship between the supreme lord (the Qianlong Emperor) and the lesser lord (George Macartney). The kesi’s inscription, composed by the Emperor himself, embodies the core of China’s tributary practice: “In my kindness to men from afar I make generous return.” Thus far, the kesi channels the conventions of zhigong tu and manifests the principles of li. During the Qing Dynasty, the Qianlong Emperor’s materialization of his power through the appropriation of zhigong tu and li was necessary to foster domestic confidence. The kesi, marking the end of China’s tributary practice, can be alternatively understood as the Emperor’s last capacity to maintain internal stability through the Chinese tributary system.--Abstract.

Local access dig.pdf. [Zhang Macartney.pdf]

Multimedia
SubjectChina--Politics and government--Qing dynasty, 1644-1911 China--History--Qianlong 乾隆, 1736-1795 Macartney Embassy to China, 1793 kesi [k'o-ssu] 刻絲 / 緙絲 (Chinese silk tapestry) Huang Qing zhigongtu 皇清職貢圖 Macartney, George Macartney, Earl, 1737-1806. Embassy to China--Art China--Foreign relations--Great Britain--18th century