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Eastward Spread of Western Learning Chinese Educational Mission and the Challenge of Cultural Modernity

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DOI: 10.23977/history.2025.070110 | Downloads: 6 | Views: 179

Author(s)

Yunchen Peng 1

Affiliation(s)

1 Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210, USA

Corresponding Author

Yunchen Peng

ABSTRACT

This paper examines the Chinese Educational Mission (1872–1881) as a pivotal yet underappreciated episode in China's engagement with Western modernity during the late Qing Dynasty. It argues that the mission was not merely an educational experiment, but a site of deep ideological conflict between Confucian orthodoxy and the demands of modernization. Drawing upon the personal experiences of Yung Wing—the first Chinese student to graduate from a Western university—and the lives of the 120 students he helped send to the United States, the study reveals how entrenched hierarchical worldviews and cultural conservatism limited the transformative potential of the program. Despite remarkable academic success and cultural adaptation by the students, the mission was abruptly terminated due to fears of ideological contamination, particularly surrounding Christianity and Western political thought. These anxieties, amplified by incidents such as the Tianjin Massacre and the symbolism of queue-cutting, reflected broader political insecurities within the Qing court. Moreover, worsening Sino-American relations, including the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, further undermined the mission's prospects. Although some returned students later contributed to China's modernization in limited ways, most were marginalized due to their exclusion from the imperial examination system. The paper concludes that the mission's failure underscores the limits of technocratic reform in the absence of institutional restructuring. Yet, it also recognizes the mission's lasting symbolic significance as China's first major experiment in international education. Ultimately, the Chinese Educational Mission illustrates the complexity of intercultural engagement and the enduring tensions between tradition and reform in a society confronting global modernity.

KEYWORDS

Chinese Educational Mission, Qing Dynasty, Cultural Conflict

CITE THIS PAPER

Yunchen Peng, Eastward Spread of Western Learning Chinese Educational Mission and the Challenge of Cultural Modernity. Lecture Notes on History (2025) Vol. 7: 64-70. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.23977/history.2025.070110.

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