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El. knyga: Borderland Memories: Searching for Historical Identity in Post-Mao China

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"In the early 1980s, in the town of Heihe on China's northeast border with the Soviet Union in what was formerly northern Manchuria (Bei Man), a teacher, editor, and local Party official named Liu Banghou unearthed documents containing transcribed interviews that had been hidden away for over a decade during the political turmoil of the Cultural Revolution. Fifteen years earlier the Heilongjiang provincial government had sent a group of researchers to the Heihe vicinity to seek out and interview elderly residents who had migrated to the area before 1900 from "China Proper" (mostly Shandong and Hebei provinces). Specifically, they targeted individuals whose destinations had included Blagoveshchensk, the city directly across the river from Heihe on the Russian side, and an area just to the east of Blagoveshchensk formerly known as the "Sixty-Four Villages East of the River" (jiangdong liushisi tun) that had long been a source of dispute between the two countries"--

Recenzijos

'In this prodigiously well-researched book, Martin T. Fromm traces the process of constructing an always incomplete ideological consensus in 1980s China, showing how post-Mao political discourse was the continuously negotiated product of a flexible, mediated, and in many ways collaborative effort. This is a fundamental contribution to our understanding of the Deng era.' Fabio Lanza, University of Arizona 'This book provides in-depth and sophisticated analyzes of the mobilization, production, publication, and circulation of a series of published memoirs on northeastern China. Its innovative use of sources leads to a narrative that is both informative and inspiring. It will appeal to students and scholars interested in the People's Republic of China, borderland, or oral histories, as well as collective memory, identity and identification, and the legacy of colonization.' Shao Dan, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

Daugiau informacijos

An innovative study of ideology formation and political mobilization, post-Cultural Revolution reconciliation, and the recovery of borderland identities in early post-Mao China.
Acknowledgments x
Introduction 1(19)
1 Reconfiguring Cultural Production in the Post-Mao Transition
20(25)
2 Borderland Ambiguities in Narratives of Modernization and Liberation
45(30)
3 Relocating the Nation outside the Nation: Forging a Borderland-Centered Nationalist Discourse
75(35)
4 The "Historical Science" of Wenshi Ziliao
110(44)
5 Affective Community and Historical Rehabilitation: "Widely Making Friends" to Resecure Political Loyalty
154(46)
6 Mobilizing a "Patriotic United Front"
200(23)
7 Local, Regional, and National Dynamics of Wenshi Ziliao Production
223(32)
Conclusion 255(6)
References 261(19)
Index 280
Martin T. Fromm is an assistant professor at Worcester State University. He is the editor of the academic journal Currents in Teaching and Learning.