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China in Disintegration by James Edward Sheridan
China in Disintegration by James Edward Sheridan












China in Disintegration by James Edward Sheridan

Boston: Little, Brown, and Co., 1968.īECKMANN, GEORGE M. FAMILIAR QUOTATIONS: A COLLECTION OF PASSAGES, PHRASES AND PROVERBS TRACED TO THEIR SOURCES IN ANCIENT AND MODERN LITERATURE. St James's Place London: Collins, 1969.īartlett, John. FROM THE LAND OF LOST CONTENT: THE DALAI LAMA'S FIGHT FOR TIBET. New York: Coward, McCann and Geoghegan, 1973.īarber, Noel. Bureau of the Census, July, 1986.īao Ruo-Wang (Jean Pasqualini) and Rudolph Chelminski. Washington, D.C.: Center for International Research, U.S. "China: Recent Trends in Health and Mortality." CIR Staff Paper No. "Mortality in China." POPULATION AND DEVELOPMENT REVIEW, Vol. "China and Tibet: Conquest by Cultural Destruction." THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, (August 24, 1987):15īanister, Judith and Samuel H. New York: Hawthorn Books, 1972.Īvedon, John F. Alexandria Virginia: Time-Life Books, 1983.Īrcher, Jules. A sound and striking approach to these decades of desperation in the lives of a quarter of the human population-if not bypassed in the glut of "China books," it may encourage students and academics to go further.CHINESE GENOCIDE AND MASS MURDER REFERENCESĬhina's Bloody Century New Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction Publications, 1991 He leaves out explicit investigation of the international context while underlining, more than most writers, Chiang's commitment to repay external debt at the expense of the Chinese people. Sheridan gives a strong sense of the rapine of the warlords who were Chiang's off-and-on allies, and of the feeble heritage of Sun Yat-sen's patriotic platitudes. The Kuomintang turned into a mere holding operation and faded into chaos. However, the book underlines Chiang's failure to give the masses a ""Strength through Joy"" spirit and, as wartime inflation of 300% gave way to postwar collapse, the anti-Communist pitch became emptier and emptier. The KMT did ensure that forced opium production took up at least a fifth of Chinese cropland by the 1929-1933 period, and they consolidated a soldier recruitment system that approximated Nazi roundups. The KMT failed either to create an effective dictatorship or to mobilize fascist passions which could ensure willingness to "sacrifice." Thus the difficulty in squeezing enough wealth out of the peasantry to meet a foreign debt which totaled half the national revenue. Sheridan's focus on the KMT brings more to light than do many surveys of Mao's revolutionaries. Sheridan, a Northwestern University scholar, concentrates on the Kuomintang movement of Chiang Kai-shek, insisting that we judge a political force by whether it solves the problems posed to it, not, as Chiang's partisans prefer, by means of what-if's.

China in Disintegration by James Edward Sheridan

After the 1911 fall of the Manchus came the most hideous breakdown in Chinese history.














China in Disintegration by James Edward Sheridan