Opium Wars, Past and Present
Episode 9 of the History Reconsidered podcast, hosted by Jarrett Stepman, titled "Opium Wars, Past and Present" was published on January 11, 2024 and runs 60 minutes.
January 11, 2024 ·60m · History Reconsidered
Summary
On this week's episode of History Reconsidered, Sumantra Maitra and Jarrett Stepman discuss the Opium Wars. In this case, not just the 19th century struggle between Great Britain and China, but the modern conflict between China and the West.The Opium Wars are often pointed out as examples of Western colonial rapaciousness. The Chinese Communist Party frequently points to the conflicts in propaganda to justify its actions against the West, especially the United States. Many now contend that the flow of illicit fentanyl from China to the U.S. is "payback."However, as Maitra and Stepman explain, the wars were much more complicated than the simple, modern narrative of oppressor country versus oppressed. It was a conflict sparked by vast cultural and legal differences between Eastern and Western regimes as well as a fair amount of weakness and folly from the Chinese government under the Qing dynasty. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Episode Description
On this week's episode of History Reconsidered, Sumantra Maitra and Jarrett Stepman discuss the Opium Wars. In this case, not just the 19th century struggle between Great Britain and China, but the modern conflict between China and the West.
The Opium Wars are often pointed out as examples of Western colonial rapaciousness. The Chinese Communist Party frequently points to the conflicts in propaganda to justify its actions against the West, especially the United States. Many now contend that the flow of illicit fentanyl from China to the U.S. is "payback."
However, as Maitra and Stepman explain, the wars were much more complicated than the simple, modern narrative of oppressor country versus oppressed. It was a conflict sparked by vast cultural and legal differences between Eastern and Western regimes as well as a fair amount of weakness and folly from the Chinese government under the Qing dynasty.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Similar Episodes
Apr 13, 2026 ·45m
Apr 11, 2026 ·37m
Apr 10, 2026 ·26m
Apr 8, 2026 ·43m
Apr 6, 2026 ·40m
Apr 5, 2026 ·55m