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Chinese industry is topic of Case historian's new book For immediate release: December 10, 2003 For more information, contact Susan Griffith at 216-368-1004 or susan.griffith@case.edu CLEVELANDElisabeth Köll wore four layers of clothing to ward off the bone-chilling cold that seeped through the walls of the municipal archives in Nantong, China. While the Case Western Reserve University business and social historian read 30,000 files from the Dasheng Cotton Mill, she would take breaks every half hour to flex her body to relieve the numbness, but she still experienced frostbite. Huddled over the company's records, she discovered new information about China's early roots of industrialization and the adaptation of the Western concept of the corporation.
The records revealed that the Chinese industrial firm is a combination of the family enterprise with aspects of the western corporation, such as shareholders and boards of directors, controlled by family and social networks. The Chinese version also exhibits a lower standard of accountability. Findings from her yearlong stay in China in 1995 and from subsequent visits became Köll's first book From Cotton Mill to Business Empire: The Emergence of Modern Enterprises in China-published this December by Harvard University's East Asian Monographs series. The arrival of the book comes at another important milestone in Köll's career. In 2004, she will assume the helm, as president, of the 400-member Historical Society for 20th Century China during the society's biennial meeting in Vienna, Austria. Köll, 38, becomes the first woman to preside over the international organization that joins together political, social, economic, cultural and gender historians interested in China from the late 19th century through contemporary times. The society, founded in 1983, is an affiliation of the American Historical Society. Köll received a W. P. Jones Grant from the university to travel to Vienna for the meeting. Before Köll joined the society, she attended its meetings and symposia to connect with other scholars on China-especially those that bridge the "1949 divide" with the establishment of the People's Republic of China (PRC) and the cusp between what is viewed as the end of traditional China and the country's move into its modern era. "What is fun about this society is that people look at the whole picture of China-not just before or after the rise of the PRC," stated Köll. Köll traced their roots of Chinese business institutions into the late 19th and 20th centuries to understand the role the corporation takes now and had then. To find those roots, she examined Dasheng Cotton Mills as a case study. Dasheng, known as one of China's leading enterprises from 1890-1950, employed 8,000 industrial workers-mostly women from farming families who earned supplemental incomes. Köll sought information about how an agrarian workforce transforms into industrial workers, how management organized people unfamiliar with the work discipline of the factory and how people managed these large enterprises. Köll would travel eight hours by boat up the Yangtze River to reach the city of Nantong, where Zhang Jian founded the Dasheng enterprise and grew it into a conglomerate that encompassed businesses of steamships, bank, distillery, soap factory, land reclamation and agriculture. She arrived just as China began to liberalize it policies about access to records, but it still took a dinner party and the distribution of gifts to pave the way for people to accept her research project. Many people in Nantong thought Köll would stay for a month. As her work stretched into a year, her life became interwoven into the lives of people in the region. The local curiosity spurred a documentary on Köll, called "One Day in the Search of Scholarship." The video crew followed Köll from her research in the library to her calligraphy lessons and eventually to the kitchen of the gynecology department of the local hospital where Köll regularly ate her meals as a guest in the kitchen. She chose to eat in the kitchen to escape the scrutiny and questions of many curious people and to avoid the large-size family meals found in the local Chinese restaurants. While Köll's first book rolls off the press, she already started research for a new book that will examine how the building of Chinese railroads shaped the country's landscape and impacted its economic, social and cultural life. About Case Western Reserve University Case is among the nation's leading research institutions. Founded in 1826 and shaped by the unique merger of the Case Institute of Technology and Western Reserve University, Case is distinguished by its strengths in education, research, and service. Located in Cleveland, Case offers nationally recognized programs in the Arts and Sciences, Dentistry, Engineering, Law, Management, Medicine, Nursing, and Social Sciences. http://www.case.edu.
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Friday, 06-Feb-2004 18:12:41 EST |