Skip to main content
Indiana University Bloomington

Images of China

Klaus Mühlhahn « Faculty

Klaus Mühlhahn Professor, EALC
Professor, Department of History

klamuehl at indiana.edu
Ballantine Hall, Rm. 729
(812) 855-1124

Education

Research Interests

Courses Recently Taught

Awards and Distinctions

Publication Highlights

A historian of modern and late imperial China, my work examines China's cultural and social development in an international and global context. I have written about and offered classes on a wide range of subjects, including China's relations with Europe, in particular Germany; the evolution of modern Chinese law; the history of human rights in China; the role of state violence as a generator of historical experiences and on internationalization and globalization in the twentieth century China.

My first book (see below) is primarily colonial history. It deals with the German colony Kiautschou (1897-1914) in China with a particular focus on cultural exchanges and transnational processes. I try to understand the colonial world as a dynamic space of transition and transfer. My current projects use legal cases to explore social historical topics. The manuscript of my second monograph is near publication; its title is “Criminal Justice in China: A History” (under contract with Harvard University Press). Here I am interested in how the state intervenes in social life and maintains control through the establishment of a professionalized criminal justice system. My next larger project will look into philanthropy and charitable enterprises in the Northern Chinese city of Tianjin. I am now turning to developments and forces in that tended to challenge state dominance over society such as for instance humanitarian activism. It is part of a collaborative project with colleagues in Turku und Berlin aiming at understanding governance in China. What connects these different projects of mine is my continued interest in power, control and state violence - in various colonial, national or global contexts - as forces that fundamentally shape historical experiences in the modern age, in China and beyond.