Cultural Revolution

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Cultural Revolution PRINCETON UNIVERSITY: Woodrow Wilson School, Politics Department, East Asian Studies Program CONTEMPORARY CHINA: A BOOK LIST by Lynn White Autumn 2000 Edition This will be available on the web at Lynn's homepage: http://www.wws.princeton.edu/~lynn/Chinabib.pdf, which can be viewed and printed with an Adobe Acrobat Reader. Variant font sizes cause pagination of the web version to differ slightly from the paper edition. This list of items in English has several purposes: --to help advise students' course essays, junior papers, policy workshops, and senior theses about contemporary China; --to supplement the required reading lists of the seminars WWS 576a/Pol. 536 on "Chinese Development" and Pol. 535 on "Chinese Politics," as well as the lecture course, Pol. 362, for which students may find books to review in this long list; --to provide graduate students with a list that can help their study for exams in Chinese politics; a few of the compiler's favorite books are starred on the list, but not much should be made of this, because some such books may be old or the subjects may not be central to present interests; --to supplement a bibliography of all Asian serials in the Princeton Libraries that was compiled long ago by Frances Chen and Maureen Donovan. Students with research topics should definitely meet the WWS Librarian in Wallace and Rosemary Little in Firestone. For materials in Chinese and other languages, see Martin Heijdra in Gest Library. Professional bibliographers are the most neglected major academic resource at Princeton. Visit them! This list cannot cover articles, but computer databases do so, and the librarians know them. Use bibliographical search engines, of course. The list offers some call numbers of the Princeton Library system (if in Gest, with an added "G"; or if in the Wilson School, with a "W"). Look inside the call numbers for publication years (for example, .1995 is abbreviated '95). When the call number does not include the year, it is sometimes offered after the title on this list. Items lacking call numbers on this list are nonetheless usually on campus; some are presently being catalogued. Call numbers are noted for many books mainly to facilitate browsing the shelves in Princeton's open stacks. Interlibrary Loan is another way to obtain items, for researchers who begin early enough. Articles are not included, but some Web sites and relevant journals are listed below. Many book titles are shortened, but the titles' first words and first authors' names are correct. On-line databases offer full references. This bibliography will be on the Internet, but it cannot be amended at the speed of light. It is a list of references, not always of recommendations. Grateful acknowledgement goes to Nancy Hearst, as also to Michael Agelasto, David Bachman, George Hicks, Marlowe Hood, Hu Chun, Li Cheng, Connie So, Zheng Yongnian, and 2 others for help with this list. All users are asked to send additions and amendments to Lynn White (who is at 609-258-2809, voicemail at 258-4839, or home at 924-1665; also [email protected]). Please send notes on items that should appear here. Authors who do not see their books here should let Lynn know but avoid taking umbrage, because this list is admittedly incomplete. This caveat applies especially for authors who write articles mostly. Topics classifications on the list are shown below in a table of contents. Books that could be put under alternative categories nonetheless usually appear under just one. So explore the whole list for items relevant to your interest. 3 TOPIC ....................................................... PAGE Origins of the Revolution .................................... 5 Warlords & Republicans...................................... 6 The CCP, 1921 to 1949........................................ 7 Overview Texts .................................................... 8 Interpretive Overviews......................................... 9 Faction, Succession Reforms ............................. 10 Corruption .......................................................... 10 State Elite & Bureaucracy ................................. 10 Campaigns & Violence ...................................... 12 Cultural Revolution............................................ 12 Deng's & Jiang's Eras......................................... 14 Biographies of Leaders ...................................... 17 Writings of Leaders............................................ 19 Ideology.............................................................. 19 Intellectuals ........................................................ 21 Democracy Participa'n/Tiananmen .................... 22 Law, Human Rights, Control ............................. 25 Psychology (incl. negotiation) ........................... 27 Education, Youth, Sports ................................... 28 Literature, Criticism, Culture ............................. 29 Cinema, Theater, Opera ..................................... 32 Art & Music ....................................................... 33 Media & Communications ................................. 34 Beyond Beijing; Geography............................... 34 Cities .................................................................. 36 Welfare, Incomes ............................................... 37 Villages, Units, Small Networks........................ 38 Family ................................................................ 40 Class & Workers ................................................ 40 Women & Men................................................... 41 Minorities & Tibet.............................................. 42 Religion.............................................................. 44 Medicine & Aging.............................................. 45 Population & Migration ..................................... 46 Land Reforms & Peasants.................................. 47 Ag, Rural Econ, Food, Ecology ......................... 48 Economic Strategy, Enterprise........................... 51 Analyses by Sectors ........................................... 54 Industry, Labor, Management............................ 55 Science & Technology ....................................... 56 Money, Selling, Banks, Taxes............................ 57 Foreign Trade & Investment ............................. 59 Army & Defense................................................. 61 Taiwan................................................................ 62 Hong Kong, Macau, SEZs ................................. 67 Overseas Chinese ............................................... 70 Foreign Memoirs & Journals ............................. 73 4 Foreign Professionals in China .......................... 74 Sino-American Relations ................................... 75 National Policy Generators................................ 77 Policies toward Russia & Japan ......................... 80 Policies toward Non-Superpowers..................... 81 Serials with China Articles ................................ 83 Document Collections........................................ 85 Handbooks & References................................... 86 Bibliographies.................................................... 87 Web Sites on Asia............................................. 90 5 ORIGINS OF THE REVOLUTION Bernal, Martin, Chinese Socialism to 1907 ...............................................................HX387.B47 1976 Bianco, Lucien, Origins of the Chinese Revolution, 1915-1949 * ............................. 17241.19.177.02 Benton, Gregor, New Fourth Army: Communist Resistance...Yangtze..., 1938-41,..............Curzon'99 Center for Chinese Studies, Turning Points: China 1919 & 1989............................................. UC'97 Chang, Iris, The Rape of Nanking.............................................................................................Basic'96 Chen, Jerome, Highlanders of Central China, 1895-1937........................................... DS485.N68F87 Chesneaux, Jean, Secret Societies in China, 19th & 20th C's. ............................................................. Chesneaux, Jean, The Chinese Labor Movement, 1919-1927............................................................... China in Revolution: The First Phase, 1900-1913, Mary Wright, ed ...................... 17241.19.2527 G Chinese Revolution: Comparative Perspectives, Manoranjan Mohanty, ed ........................Ajanta, '92 Chow Tse-tsung, The May Fourth Movement ................................................................. 17241.19.253 Cleverley, John, In the Lap of Tigers: Communist Labor University, Jiangxi................... Rowman'00 Clubb, O. Edmund, Twentieth Century China................................................................DS774.C57'78 Cohen, Paul, History in Three Keys: Boxers as Event, Experience & Myth .....................Columbia'97 de Crespigny, Rafe, China This Century.........................................................................DS774.D4 '92 Duus, Peter+, The Japanese Informal Empire in China............................................ DS849.C6 J33'89 Elleman, Bruce, Diplomacy & Deception: Secret History...Sino-Soviet, '17-27....................Sharpe'97 Esherick, Joseph W., Reform and Revolution in China: 1911...Hunan & Hubei................DS773.E83 Esherick, Joseph W., The Origins of the Boxer Uprising............................................... DS771.E73'87 Fairbank, John K. & M. Goldman, China: A New History ('98 ed. too) * .................... DS735.F27'92
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