Zhongguo Gong Chan Dang Issuances

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Zhongguo Gong Chan Dang Issuances http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt0t1nd804 No online items Preliminary Inventory of the Zhongguo Gong Chan Dang issuances Yichen Jin and Hoover Institution Archives Staff Hoover Institution Library and Archives © 2009, 2013 434 Galvez Mall Stanford University Stanford, CA 94305-6003 [email protected] URL: https://www.hoover.org/library-archives Preliminary Inventory of the >2002C15 1 Zhongguo Gong Chan Dang issuances Title: Zhongguo gong chan dang issuances Date (inclusive): 1919-2006 Collection Number: >2002C15 Contributing Institution: Hoover Institution Library and Archives Language of Material: In Chinese and English. Physical Description: 44 manuscript boxes, 2 oversize boxes, 2 oversize folders(24 Linear Feet) Abstract: Internal documents, books, pamphlets, serial issues, broadsides, and flyers relating to political, military, social, and economic conditions in China at the national, provincial, and local levels. Hoover Institution Archives Access The collection is open for research; materials must be requested at least two business days in advance of intended use. Publication Rights For copyright status, please contact the Hoover Institution Archives. Acquisition Information Acquired by the Hoover Institution Archives in 2002 with an increments thereafter. Preferred Citation [Identification of item], Zhongguo gong chan dang issuances, [Box no., Folder no. or title], Hoover Institution Archives. Historical Note Chinese Communist Party. Scope and Content of Collection Internal documents, books, pamphlets, serial issues, broadsides, and flyers relating to political, military, social, and economic conditions in China at the national, provincial, and local levels. An increment received in 2012 consists of more than two hundred pieces of historical material relating to the Chinese Cultural Revolution. It contains nearly two hundred issues of the Red Guard "little newspapers" published between 1967 and 1971 and other communist pamphlets, internal party documents, booklets, serial issues, and published speeches of communist leaders during this period. Internal Party Reports 1973-1991 box 1, folder 1 Mao Zedong's conversation with Kissinger 1973-1975 box 1, folder 2 Hua Guofeng speech 1970-1971 box 1, folder 3 Instructions on fighting against counter-revolutionary sabotage 1970-1980 box 1, folder 4 Mao Zedong conversation with Ho Chi Minh in Hangzhou 1966-1969 box 1, folder 5 Deepening the struggle against Hu and Chen counter-revolutionary group 1972 box 1, folder 6 "Historical Issues of the Party," draft 1981-1987 box 1, folder 7-8 11th central committee 6th meeting materials 1981, 1989-1991 box 2, folder 1 An Ping incident 1968 box 2, folder 2 Conference against capitalism classes, report 1967 box 2, folder 3 Hua Zhangxi file 1950-1970 box 2, folder 4 Zhou Tielin file 1968-1970 box 2, folder 5-6 "5/16" incident 1971 box 2, folder 7-8 Report of individuals 1958-1970 box 2, folder 9 Miscellaneous report 1943-1971 box 3 Party Cadre Member Files 1956-1987 box 3, folder 1 Liu Changgen, "materials to be destroyed," 1982 box 3, folder 2-3 Ji Xiying 1956-1973 box 3, folder 4 Wu Shaocheng 1972 box 3, folder 5 Wang Shizhi 1972 box 3, folder 6 Fan Chuide 1970 box 3, folder 7-8 Individuals' files 1967-1987 box 3, folder 9-10 Cadre member files 1962-1969 Preliminary Inventory of the >2002C15 2 Zhongguo Gong Chan Dang issuances First Design Institution of Light Industry Reports 1950-1987 First Design Institution of Light Industry Reports 1950-1987 box 4, folder 1 Index of files of cadre members 1950-1970 box 4, folder 2-3 First Design Institution of Light Industry files 1966-1972 box 4, folder 4 Xiao Zi Bao 1970 box 4, folder 5-6 File to be destroyed 1982 box 4, folder 7 Materials regarding the case of "Ge," undated box 5, folder 1 Materials of the incident where the Design Institution was searched without warrant 1966-1972 box 5, folder 2 Punishment decisions on individuals involved in illegal search 1971-1972 box 5, folder 3 Chu Lu file 1971-1972 box 5, folder 4 Ma Qian file 1971-1972 box 5, folder 5 Illegal search public report 1972 box 5, folder 6 Speech regarding the incident of "5/16," 1972 box 6, folder 1 Materials regarding the incident of "5/16," 1972 box 6, folder 2 Dong Feng communication material 1967 box 6, folder 3 Materials written by Deng Liangyi 1969 box 6, folder 4 Issues about Zhong Nan Hai 1971-1972 box 6, folder 5 Speech of investigated targets 1971-1972 box 6, folder 6 External materials 1984 box 6, folder 7 File of individuals with common issues 1987 "5/16 Movement" Investigation Reports 1967-1971 box 7, folder 1-2 Comprehensive confession material 1967-1970 box 7, folder 3 "Design Red Flag," introduction 1967 box 7, folder 4 Zhao Xiuying diary 1970 box 7, folder 5 Liu Jiying confession 1970 box 7, folder 6 Peng Zhengao confession 1970 box 7, folder 7 Zhong Nan Hai incident, speeches 1970 box 7, folder 8 Zhang Shichun, Liu Junliang confession 1971 box 7, folder 9 Anonymous diary 1971 box 7, "5/16 Movement," general report 1970-1972 folder 10-11 box 8, folder 1 Police record of "5/16" incident 1967 box 8, folder 2-3 Guo Shuchun revelation material 1967 box 8, folder 4 Investigation group meeting minutes 1967 box 8, folder 5-6 Li Deheng profile 1970 box 8, folder 7 Lin Jiying profile 1972 Class Struggle in the Chinese Cultural Revolution File 1949-1995 box 9, folder 1 Critics on Liang Sumin's idealism 1995 box 9, folder 2 Shandong Supreme Court materials 1956 box 9, folder 3 Yi Peng Dehuai Wei Shou De Fan Dang Ji Tuan De Jue Yi 1959 box 9, folder 4 "A Revolutionary Granaries," 1964 box 9, folder 5 Critics on Liu Shaoqi's economic revisionism 1967-1969 box 9, folder 6 Agricultural Department correspondence 1972 box 9, folder 7 Wan Shan naval battle 1975 box 9, folder 8 Outline of Xi'an incident 1982 box 9, folder 9 Temporary regulations on religious activities 1982 box 9, folder 10 Xin Jiang Poverty Alleviation Office instructions 1994 box 9, folder 11 Beijing Air Force materials 1984 box 9, folder 12 Beijing, Xi Yu area, Bureau of Justice work summary 1986-1987 box 9, folder 13 Zui Cao Zhi Shi (The Utmost Instructions) undated box 9, folder 14 Shou Du Feng Lei, newspaper undated box 9, folder 15 Li Qi correspondence undated box 10, folder 1 New China, foreign cultural exchange memorabilia 1949-1966 box 10, folder 2 Experience exchange in education 1953 box 10, folder 3 Arrest policies for counter-revolutionaries and other criminals 1953 Preliminary Inventory of the >2002C15 3 Zhongguo Gong Chan Dang issuances Class Struggle in the Chinese Cultural Revolution File 1949-1995 box 10, folder 4 Shan Xi rectification movement 1957 box 10, folder 5 Rightists' quotations on industrial and transportation systems 1957 box 10, folder 6 Xu Futang, self review 1957 box 10, folder 7 Important study materials 1960 box 10, folder 8 Unidentified work diary 1961 box 10, folder 9 Preliminary screening and positive screening of the anti-rightist movement 1962 box 10, folder 10 Yang Zhi material 1964 box 10, folder 11 Critics on Wang Ming's revisionism 1966 box 10, folder 12 Survey materials of Lei Jiande 1969-1972 box 10, folder 13 "Marxism-Leninism and the Ideology of Party Members," undated box 10, folder 14 "Socialist Revolution in Ideology and Politics," undated box 10, folder 15 "The Struggle Is Getting Deeper," press release draft undated box 10, folder 16 Li Yaxing's anti-party, anti-socialism remarks undated box 10, folder 17 "What is Liberalism?," Yang Dongling undated box 10, folder 18 "The Class Character of Humans," undated box 11, folder 1 Chinese history study 1955 box 11, folder 2 Zheng Feng, newspaper 1957 box 11, folder 3 Liu Shurong file 1968 box 11, folder 4 Pang Xiusheng file 1969 box 11, folder 5 Qiao Zhiwen materials 1971 box 11, folder 6 Shi Ya materials 1975 box 11, folder 7 Shen Xiuqin, Huo Jihuan, investigation report 1977 box 11, folder 8 Huo Jihuan files 1977 box 12 Can Kao Xiao Xi Magazine File 1948-1987 box 12, folder 1-4 Can Kao Xiao Xi magazine copies 1948 box 12, folder 5 "Rural Revolutionary Base History in the Second Civil War," 1981 box 12, folder 6 Inventory list 1986 box 12, folder 7 55th anniversary edition 1987 box 13 Pre and Post Cultural Revolution Materials 1949-1988 box 13, folder 1 Civil Affairs Bureau work summary 1949-1950 box 13, folder 2 Three Antis Movement, punished party member registration form 1952 box 13, folder 3 Trust company registration form 1952 box 13, folder 4 Confidentiality regulations 1954 box 13, folder 5 Supreme Court written judgements 1954-1955 box 13, folder 6 Counter-insurgency campaign, Han Yueshun files 1955 box 13, folder 7 Beijing Civil Affairs Bureau struggle, focus registration list 1955 box 13, folder 8 Three Antis Movement, punished party member registration form 1956 box 13, folder 9 Shatter the rightists' offensive 1957 box 13, folder 10 Miscellaneous files from the Civil Affairs Bureau 1959 box 13, folder 11 Diao Xiangfu file 1962 box 13, folder 12 Five Antis Movement materials 1964 box 13, folder 13 Unions roster 1967 box 13, folder 14 High school forum 1967 box 13, folder 15 Revolutionary critics 1969 box 13, folder 16 Chinese Communist Party 9th National Representatives Conference 1969 box 13, folder 17 Zhao Zhongxiu files 1971 box 13, folder 18 Study materials 1974 box 13, folder 19 Zhang Xiaoyou files 1976 box 13, folder 20 Critics on the Gang of Four 1977 box 13, folder 21 Xi Yu, spiritual civilization report 1988 box 13, folder 22 Xi Yu, legal education survey report 1988 Government Publications 1919-2006 Scope and Contents note Includes books, pamphlets, and brochures.
Recommended publications
  • Information to Users
    "No more interference": The response of Chinese intellectuals to United States China policy, 1945-1950. Item Type text; Dissertation-Reproduction (electronic) Authors Zhang, Hong. Publisher The University of Arizona. Rights Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. Download date 24/09/2021 06:36:10 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/10150/187365 INFORMATION TO USERS This manuscript ,has been reproduced from the microfilm master. UMI films the text directly from the original or copy submitted. Thus, some thesis and dissertation copies are in typewriter face, while others may be from any type of computer printer. The quality of this reproduction is depeDdent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleedtbrough, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely. event that the author did not send UMI a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Oversize materials (e.g., maps, drawings, charts) are reproduced by sectioning the original, beginning at the upper left-hand comer and continuing from left to right in equal sections with smaIl overlaps. Each original is also photographed in one exposure and is included in reduced form at the back of the book. Photographs included in the original manuscript have been reproduced xerographically in this copy.
    [Show full text]
  • The History and Context of Chinese-Western Intercultural Marriage in Modern and Contemporary China (From 1840 to the 21St Century)
    The History And Context Of Chinese-Western Intercultural Marriage In Modern And Contemporary China (From 1840 To The 21st Century) Australian wife Margaret and her Chinese husband Quong Tart and their three eldest children, 1894. Source: Tart McEvoy papers, Society of Australian Genealogists 1.1 Brief Introduction It is now becoming more and more common to see Chinese-Western intercultural couples in China and other countries. In the era of the global village, intercultural marriage between different races and nationalities is frequent. It brings happiness, but also sorrow, as there are both understandings and misunderstandings, as well as conflicts and integrations. With the reform of China and the continuous development, and improvement of China’s reputation internationally, many aspects of intercultural marriage have changed from ancient to contemporary times in China. Although marriage is a very private affair for the individuals who participate in it, it also reflects and connects with many complex factors such as economic development, culture differences, political backgrounds and transition of traditions, in both China and the Western world. As a result, an ordinary marriage between a Chinese person and a Westerner is actually an episode in a sociological grand narrative. This paper reviews the history of Chinese-Western marriage in modern China from 1840 to 1949, and it reveals the history of the earliest Chinese marriages to Westerners at the beginning of China’s opening up. More Chinese men married Western wives at first, while later unions between Chinese wives and Western husbands outnumbered these. Four types of CWIMs in modern China were studied. Both Western and Chinese governments’ policies and attitudes towards Chinese-Western marriages in this period were also studied.
    [Show full text]
  • The Chongqing Negotiations: a Political Offensive for the Peace and Democracy Policy
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by CSCanada.net: E-Journals (Canadian Academy of Oriental and Occidental Culture,... ISSN 1927-0232 [Print] Higher Education of Social Science ISSN 1927-0240 [Online] Vol. 19, No. 1, 2020, pp. 40-45 www.cscanada.net DOI:10.3968/11788 www.cscanada.org The Chongqing Negotiations: A Political Offensive for the Peace and Democracy Policy WANG Jin[a],* [a]Chongqing Hongyan Revolutionary History Museum, Chongqing, ended up with victory. Along with the victory, the most China. important, urgent and real political issue facing the KMT *Corresponding author. and the CPC was how to distribute the right to accept Supported by the State Administration of Cultural Heritage: surrender. The dispute between the KMT and the CPC Demonstration Project of Revolutionary History Museum Education on campus. over the right to accept surrender was not just a military issue, but a political one as well, which would involve the Received 24 May 2020; accepted 6 August 2020 move direction of the post-war China and fundamental Published online 26 September 2020 changes in domestic political landscape. Chiang Kai-shek gave orders to He Yingqin at the Abstract midnight: externally to issue an ultimatum to the highest In response to changes in the domestic and international commander of Japanese army, demanding a response with situations around the victory of the anti-Japanese war, the 24 hours to such surrender conditions as ceasing military Kuomintang (KMT) and the Communist Party of China operations, maintaining public order, protecting public (CPC) adjusted their established strategic deployments and private properties, and deferring to KMT troops; in due course to cope with the new post-war domestic while internally requiring the KMT troops to follow political and military landscapes.
    [Show full text]
  • 20180115-CHN-Eng.Pdf (1.114Mb)
    Meeting Report GO WHO CHINA: WORKING IN WHO 15 January 2018 Beijing, People's Republic of China GO WHO China: Working in WHO 15 January 2018 Beijing, People's Republic of China WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION REGIONAL OFFICE FOR THE WESTERN PACIFIC English only MEETING REPORT GO WHO CHINA: WORKING IN WHO Convened by: WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION REGIONAL OFFICE FOR THE WESTERN PACIFIC Beijing, People’s Republic of China 15 January 2018 Not for sale Printed and distributed by: World Health Organization Regional Office for the Western Pacific Manila, Philippines February 2018 NOTE The views expressed in this report are those of the participants of the Go WHO Workshops to Improve Geographical Representation of WHO Staff and do not necessarily reflect the policies of the conveners. This report has been prepared by the World Health Organization Regional Office for the Western Pacific for Member States in the Region and for those who participated in the Go WHO Workshops to Improve Geographical Representation of WHO Staff in Beijing, People’s Republic of China on 15 January 2018. CONTENTS SUMMARY ............................................................................................................................................ 1 1. INTRODUCTION .............................................................................................................................. 2 1.1 Background ................................................................................................................................... 2 1.2 Workshop objectives ....................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Has Man a Future? Dialogues with the Last Confucian China Academic Library
    China Academic Library Shu Ming Liang Guy S. Alitto Has Man a Future? Dialogues with the Last Confucian China Academic Library For further volumes: http://www.springer.com/series/11562 Academic Advisory Board: Researcher Geng, Yunzhi, Institute of Modern History, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, China Professor Han, Zhen, Beijing Foreign Studies University, China Researcher Hao, Shiyuan, Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, China Professor Li, Xueqin, Department of History, Tsinghua University, China Professor Li, Yining, Guanghua School of Management, Peking University, China Researcher Lu, Xueyi, Institute of Sociology, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, China Professor Tang, Yijie, Department of Philosophy, Peking University, China Professor Wong, Young-tsu, Department of History, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, USA Professor Yu, Keping, Central Compilation and Translation Bureau, China Professor Yue, Daiyun, Department of Chinese Language and Literature, Peking University, China Zhu, Yinghuang, China Daily Press, China Shu Ming Liang • Guy S. Alitto Has Man a Future? Dialogues with the Last Confucian Shu Ming Liang (deceased) Guy S. Alitto East Asian Languages and Civilizations The University of Chicago Chicago, IL, USA ISSN 2195-1853 ISSN 2195-1861 (electronic) ISBN 978-3-642-35815-9 ISBN 978-3-642-35816-6 (eBook) DOI 10.1007/978-3-642-35816-6 Springer Heidelberg New York Dordrecht London Library of Congress Control Number: 2013933021 © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2013 This work is subject to copyright. All rights are reserved by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, speci fi cally the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on micro fi lms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed.
    [Show full text]
  • Instructions on How to Read the Time Zones Each Schedule for the Conference Days Includes the Time Zones of Presenters and Participants
    Instructions on how to read the time zones Each schedule for the conference days includes the time zones of presenters and participants. The events are always scheduled in the column representing the time zone of the presenter. What does that mean? If you are scheduled to present and are located in the US where the central time UTC-5 is valid, then you check that column for your event and the left of that column for the time of your event. For example, workshop 9a is taking place at 10:30 AM US Central UTC-5. Participants who want to view the presentation need to have their time zone in mind and check the times either left or right of the 10:30 AM US Central UTC-5, that is, on the same line. If you are a viewer located in Germany, workshop 9a takes place at 4:30 PM (UTC+1). If you are joining from China (UTC+8), that would make the workshop a late evening event at 11:30 PM. soon. iConference 2021 Agenda Public Schedule The schedule presented in SCOOCS (formerly iChair), our online conferencing platform, automatically converts the presentation times to the time zone of your location. 17.03 - 31.03 Please check the digital public schedule here: https://iconference2021.ichair.org/public/conference/150/timeline-agenda Version: 11 March 2021 Color Keys Full Papers Visions Workshops Posters Student symposium Chinese Papers Early Career Colloquium Previous day / Next day Short Papers Keynotes SIE VIS Doctoral Colloquium 2 Archival Education Break Wednesday, 17.03 Time US - Pacific UTC-7 Time US - Mountain UTC-6 Time US - Central UTC-5 Time US
    [Show full text]
  • Adaptation to World Trends: a Rereading of the May Fourth Movement Radicalization Jyväskylä: University of Jyväskylä, 2013, 236 P
    JYVÄSKYLÄ STUDIES IN EDUCATION, PSYCHOLOGY AND SOCIAL RESEARCH 463 Jarkko Haapanen Adaptation to World Trends A Rereading of the May Fourth Movement Radicalization JYVÄSKYLÄ STUDIES IN EDUCATION, PSYCHOLOGY AND SOCIAL RESEARCH 463 Jarkko Haapanen Adaptation to World Trends A Rereading of the May Fourth Movement Radicalization Esitetään Jyväskylän yliopiston yhteiskuntatieteellisen tiedekunnan suostumuksella julkisesti tarkastettavaksi yliopiston vanhassa juhlasalissa S212 maaliskuun 23. päivänä 2013 kello 12. Academic dissertation to be publicly discussed, by permission of the Faculty of Social Sciences of the University of Jyväskylä, in Auditorium S212, on March 23, 2013 at 12 o’clock noon. UNIVERSITY OF JYVÄSKYLÄ JYVÄSKYLÄ 2013 Adaptation to World Trends A Rereading of the May Fourth Movement Radicalization JYVÄSKYLÄ STUDIES IN EDUCATION, PSYCHOLOGY AND SOCIAL RESEARCH 463 Jarkko Haapanen Adaptation to World Trends A Rereading of the May Fourth Movement Radicalization UNIVERSITY OF JYVÄSKYLÄ JYVÄSKYLÄ 2013 Editors Jussi Kotkavirta Department of Social Sciences and Philosophy, University of Jyväskylä Pekka Olsbo, Harri Hirvi Publishing Unit, University Library of Jyväskylä URN:ISBN:978-951-39-5114-6 ISBN 978-951-39-5114-6 (PDF) ISBN 978-951-39-5113-9 (nid.) ISSN 0075-4625 Copyright © 2013, by University of Jyväskylä Jyväskylä University Printing House, Jyväskylä 2013 ABSTRACT Haapanen, Jarkko Adaptation to World Trends: A Rereading of the May Fourth Movement Radicalization Jyväskylä: University of Jyväskylä, 2013, 236 p. (Jyväskylä Studies in Education, Psychology and Social Research, ISSN 0075-4625; 463) ISBN 978-951-39-5113-9 (nid.) ISBN 978-951-39-5114-6 (PDF) This thesis is a rereading of the May Fourth movement radicalization. Instead of studying ideologies as such, the study examines the political languages that were used in May Fourth Movement journals in China before the official establishment of the Chinese Communist Party in July 1921.
    [Show full text]
  • The Chongqing Negotiations: a Political Offensive for the Peace and Democracy Policy
    ISSN 1927-0232 [Print] Higher Education of Social Science ISSN 1927-0240 [Online] Vol. 19, No. 1, 2020, pp. 40-45 www.cscanada.net DOI:10.3968/11788 www.cscanada.org The Chongqing Negotiations: A Political Offensive for the Peace and Democracy Policy WANG Jin[a],* [a]Chongqing Hongyan Revolutionary History Museum, Chongqing, ended up with victory. Along with the victory, the most China. important, urgent and real political issue facing the KMT *Corresponding author. and the CPC was how to distribute the right to accept Supported by the State Administration of Cultural Heritage: surrender. The dispute between the KMT and the CPC Demonstration Project of Revolutionary History Museum Education on campus. over the right to accept surrender was not just a military issue, but a political one as well, which would involve the Received 24 May 2020; accepted 6 August 2020 move direction of the post-war China and fundamental Published online 26 September 2020 changes in domestic political landscape. Chiang Kai-shek gave orders to He Yingqin at the Abstract midnight: externally to issue an ultimatum to the highest In response to changes in the domestic and international commander of Japanese army, demanding a response with situations around the victory of the anti-Japanese war, the 24 hours to such surrender conditions as ceasing military Kuomintang (KMT) and the Communist Party of China operations, maintaining public order, protecting public (CPC) adjusted their established strategic deployments and private properties, and deferring to KMT troops; in due course to cope with the new post-war domestic while internally requiring the KMT troops to follow political and military landscapes.
    [Show full text]
  • UC Santa Barbara Electronic Theses and Dissertations
    UC Santa Barbara UC Santa Barbara Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title Writing Modernity: Constructing a History of Chinese Architecture, 1920-1949 Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2sg0n862 Author Yan, Wencheng Yan Publication Date 2016 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Santa Barbara Writing Modernity: Constructing a History of Chinese Architecture, 1920 – 1949 A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in History of Art & Architecture by Yan Wencheng Committee in charge: Professor Swati Chattopadhyay, Chair Professor Richard Wittman Professor Xiaowei Zheng March 2016 The dissertation of Yan Wencheng is approved. _____________________________________________ Richard Wittman _____________________________________________ Xiaowei Zheng _____________________________________________ Swati Chattopadhyay, Committee Chair March 2016 Writing Modernity: Constructing a History of Chinese Architecture, 1920 – 1949 Copyright © 2016 by Yan Wencheng iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This dissertation has taken longer than I had imagined at the beginning of my graduate career. It would not have been possible without the help of many along the way. I wish to thank my home department of the History of Art & Architecture at the University of California, Santa Barbara, for providing academic and financial support for my studies. I thank the professors who have given support and assistance whenever I needed it, making the department my home for almost a decade. In particular, my thanks go to Professors E. Bruce Robertson, Peter Sturman, Jeremy White, Volker M. Welter and Ann Jensen Adams. I thank the staff at the C.V. Starr East Asian Library of the University of California, Berkeley, where I conducted preliminary research during the spring of 2012.
    [Show full text]
  • Shandong Province and Chinese Communist Military and Financial Strength
    A Springboard to Victory: Shandong Province and Chinese Communist Military and Financial Strength 1937-1945 by Sherman Xiaogang Lai A thesis submitted to the Department of History in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Queen's University Kingston, Ontario, Canada September, 2008 Copyright © Sherman Xiaogang Lai, 2008 ABSTRACT A Springboard to Victory: Shandong Province and Chinese Communist Military and Financial Strength, 1937-1945 Sherman Xiaogang Lai Thesis Supervisor: Professor Emily M Hill During the Sino-Japanese war of 1937 to 1945, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in Shandong Province in North China achieved an unnoticed but historically significant success in financial affairs. From that time onward, the CCP in Shandong not only controlled economic affairs within its territory, but also obtained access to territories under enemy occupation through manipulation of currency exchange rates and by controlling the trade in staple grains, cotton, salt and peanut oil. As a result, trade with occupied China and with the Japanese invaders became the principal source of revenue of the CCP in Shandong as early as the second half of 1943. By the time of Japan’s defeat in August 1945, about 80% of the CCP’s revenue in Shandong came from trade beyond the areas under its control. Moreover, the CCP in Shandong deliberately carried out a policy of controlled inflation to increase its financial power. The key to this achievement was the CCP’s success in establishing exclusive zones for its banknotes in August 1943. The exclusive use of CCP currency developed in the course of many years of armed conflict among Japanese, CCP and Nationalist (GMD) forces in the province.
    [Show full text]
  • YEAGER-DISSERTATION-2021.Pdf
    Copyright by Benjamin Hudson Yeager 2021 The Dissertation Committee for Benjamin Hudson Yeager Certifies that this is the approved version of the following Dissertation: Knowledge Capital in Socialist China: The Political Interplay of Intellectuals, Cadres, and the Party-State, 1950-1959 Committee: Huaiyin Li, Supervisor Robert Oppenheim Mark Ravina Yoav Di-Capua Knowledge Capital in Socialist China: The Political Interplay of Intellectuals, Cadres, and the Party-State, 1950-1959 by Benjamin Hudson Yeager Dissertation Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of The University of Texas at Austin in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy The University of Texas at Austin May 2021 Dedication For Sarah, who was there from the beginning to the end of my graduate school experience Acknowledgements A project the size of a dissertation would be impossible without a seemingly endless number of individuals. This includes, most obviously, Huaiyin Li, who has shepherded my career as a graduate student from beginning to end. His advise, mentorship, and willingness to casually discuss the ideas that led to this present work were invaluable. The rest of my committee—Robert Oppenheim, Mark Ravina, and Yoav Di-Capua—provided no less thoughtful feedback over the course of the project. A number of other professors at UT provided considerable support or career advice over the course of my time, including Nancy Stalker, Penne Restad, and Mark Metzler. As with many history graduate students, I am indebted to the massive behind-the-scenes enterprise undertaken by Marilyn Lehman and now Michael Schmidt. This work was also supported with a generous research fellowship provided by the University of Texas at Austin.
    [Show full text]
  • Attuning Taxation to Investment Climate
    Sharp Contrast—the old and the new. Photo by Wang Wenyang HIGHLIGHTS OF THE WEEK BeijingR-ir VOL. 34, NO. 10 MABCH11-17,1991 Four Principles on New International Order CONTENTS • Chinese Foreign Minister Qian Qichen recently put NOTES FROM THE EDITORS 4 forward four principles on the establishment of a new China Sees an Upturn in Its Economy international order. These principles are: seek common EVENTS/TRENDS S9 ground while putting aside differences; mutual respect; Palcistani PM's 'Homecoming' to non-interference in the internal affairs of various na• Beijing President Hails Kuwait;_s Liberation tions; equality and mutual benefit (p. 10). Blueprint Designed for Economic Reform Sino-Soviet Relations Promoted Economic and Social Development In 1990 Lending a Hand to Rebuilding Kuwait • A recent report issued by the Statistical Bureau of the China to Improve TOEFL People's Republic of China points out the major econo• Supervision mic achievements won by China in 1990. Political and News in Brief social stability brought about a 5 percent increase in INTERNATIONAL Current International Situation and China's GNP and a 4.8 percent growth in national China's Relations With Western income over 1989 respectively (p. I-VIII). Europe 10 Pakistan Increases Oil Production 13 Changes in Soviet-Japan Relations 14 China's Administrative Structural Reform Western Pacific: A Dynamic Region 15 CHINA • Remarkable achievements have been scored in China's Administrative Structural Reform 18 administrative structural reform. While carrying out Economic Restructuring in the 1990s 20 reform of the organizational structure of the State Attuning Taxation to the Investment Council, close attention has also been paid to reform of Climate 22 local organizational structures at selected locations na• Family Planning: the Way Out 26 tionwide (p.
    [Show full text]