Tuesday, 3 February 2015 from 18:30 to 20:00 (GMT)
Asia House
63 New Cavendish St
W1G 7LP London
United Kingdom
Tickets £10, concessions £8, members £6.
During the First World War, 95,000 Chinese farm labourers volunteered to leave their remote villages and work for Britain. They were labelled “the forgotten of the forgotten”, as their stories failed to form part of the public record on the War. This is just one example of many of the lesser known stories relating to China and the Great War. But these stories are now starting to be addressed. To mark the centenary of the First World War, Penguin China has published a series of short histories on the economic and social costs it brought to China and the Chinese. Each book – written by a leading expert in the field – tells a fascinating tale which will fill the gaps of your China and WWI knowledge, including the only land battle in East Asia fought by Japan and Britain against the German concession in Shandong. Asia House is pleased to host a panel with several of these authors, who will all talk on their chosen subjects. Speakers include: Best-selling author and historian Paul French, the chair of the panel (Betrayal in Paris: How the Treaty of Versailles Led to China’s Long Revolution) Journalist, best-selling author and China analyst Jonathan Fenby (The Siege of Tsingtao) Senior Lecturer in English Literature and Cultural Studies, Dr Anne Witchard, from the University of Westminster (England’s Yellow Peril: Sinophobia and the Great War) Professor of History at University of Bristol, Robert Bickers, (Getting Stuck in For Shanghai: Putting the Kibosh on the Kaiser from the Bund) Curator of Chinese collections at the British Library, Frances Wood (Picnics Prohibited: Diploma in a Chaotic China during the First World War) Join us to hear the fascinating and all too often forgotten stories of the Great War. A drinks reception will follow, with signed copies of the books available to purchase.