Even Edward Said mentioned the following work in his Intro-
Asia And Western Dominance
A Survey Of The Vasco Da Gama Epoch Of Asian History (1959)
K. M. Panikkar
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->The settlement bore witness to the double character of the Boxer uprising - the anti-missionary sentiment and the resentment against the Powers for the humiliations inflicted on China. The missionaries were amply provided for in the settlement. They were to receive a share of the indemnity., and the imperial examinations against which they had so long complained as the main obstacle to their intellectual domination were abolished for five years. The Powers were able to convert a portion of Peking into an armed camp and there, in the heart of the capital and overlooking the Forbidden City, they were able to lord it over the Chinese. But few foresaw that these extreme conditions carried the seeds of their own destruction; for it is to the Boxer Protocol that we can trace the extreme bitterness which characterized Chinese relationships with the West during the next fifty years.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
Asia And Western Dominance
A Survey Of The Vasco Da Gama Epoch Of Asian History (1959)
K. M. Panikkar
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->The settlement bore witness to the double character of the Boxer uprising - the anti-missionary sentiment and the resentment against the Powers for the humiliations inflicted on China. The missionaries were amply provided for in the settlement. They were to receive a share of the indemnity., and the imperial examinations against which they had so long complained as the main obstacle to their intellectual domination were abolished for five years. The Powers were able to convert a portion of Peking into an armed camp and there, in the heart of the capital and overlooking the Forbidden City, they were able to lord it over the Chinese. But few foresaw that these extreme conditions carried the seeds of their own destruction; for it is to the Boxer Protocol that we can trace the extreme bitterness which characterized Chinese relationships with the West during the next fifty years.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->