Preface Introduction 1. Adversaries 2. “The event on the horizon” 3. Peace postures 4. ‘Offshore China’ 5. Crossing the river 6. Taking the cities 7. Parallel worlds 8. Mao’s new world 9. Endgames 10. Afterwards
A history of 1949, a pivotal year in the Chinese Communist Revolution.
Graham Hutchings is an Associate at the University of Oxford’s China Centre and an Honorary Professor at University of Nottingham, UK. He was Managing Editor and then Managing Director at Oxford Analytica, the global analysis firm, and between 1987 and 1998 was China Correspondent of London’s Daily Telegraph, based first in Beijing and then Hong Kong. He is the author of Modern China: A Companion to a Rising Power (2000).
Adds to our understanding of the rise of Chairman Mao.
*The Independent*
An excellent new book about the founding year of the People’s
Republic.
*The Economist*
China 1949: Year of Revolution is a gripping account... the book
answers in meticulous detail the big question: why did the
Communists win?... an excellent record of one of the most important
historical events of the 20th century.
*South China Morning Post Magazine*
An excellent book, which confines its focus to the pivotal year
which ended 30 years of chaos and civil conflict and opened a new
chapter in China’s history — and the world’s. Well worth
reading.
*Morning Star*
A persuasive and readable narrative of that critical year,
accurately emphasising the catastrophic shortcomings of the
Nationalists and of Chiang Kai-shek that contributed to their
defeat… China 1949 brings this critical year to life and is a good
starting point for understanding how the People's Republic of China
developed.
*History Today*
Well researched and elegantly written.
*The Tablet*
Provides an engaging day-by-day account of those momentous events …
For those wishing to pursue the subject in greater detail, this
volume lays an excellent foundation.
*Asia Times*
This is an excellent study and highly recommended.
*The Chartist*
This book offers an accessible, authoritative account that provides
orientation on where things were at the very start of the great
Communist project, and some way of understanding better where they
stand today.
*Asian Affairs*
‘A wonderful read for students and general readers why 1949 was a
fateful and pivotal year that changed the fate of the most populous
country in the world. It shows vividly that the Communist Party did
not come to power riding on the tide of a great revolution that
swept across China but it seized the mandate of Heaven as
successive imperial dynasties had done in the past – by military
conquest.’
*Steve Tsang, Professor of Chinese Studies and Director of the
China Institute, SOAS University of London, UK [and author of A
Modern History of Hong Kong]*
China 1949 is a compelling achievement. First, Hutchings gives a
clear, balanced account of the titanic forces that brought to power
one of the most important political movements of the 20th century,
the Chinese Communist Party. But then, he gives the book a deeply
humane and moving heart with accounts of the emotions and dilemmas
felt both by those who supported the revolution and those who
opposed it. This is history on the grand scale but with a
brilliant, observant eye for the complexities that underpin this
pivotal event.
*Rana Mitter, Director of the University China Centre, University
of Oxford, UK, and author of China's Good War: How World War II is
Shaping a New Nationalism*
‘The Chinese have recently celebrated the 70th anniversary of a
revolution which changed the course of world history. Graham
Hutchings reveals the extent of the Communist triumph in that
epoch-making year, and the countervailing humiliation of the
Nationalists. The book is well researched, tells a fascinating
story with pace and elegance, and illuminates what is happening in
China, Taiwan and Hong Kong today.’
*Simon Scott Plummer, Feature Writer on East Asia for The Times,
Diplomatic Correspondent and Chief Foreign Leader Writer for The
Daily Telegraph, and frequent reviewer for Times Literary
Supplement and The Tablet*
An interesting aspect for today's readers is the book's
contribution to understanding current issues surrounding China and
its place in the world.
*China2025.nl (Bloomsbury Translation)*
The victory of Chinese Communist forces over those of China’s
Nationalist Government in 1949 is one of the great climacterics of
the twentieth century. Not only did it define China’s subsequent
political trajectory, but it also shaped the futures of Taiwan and
Hong Kong. China 1949 provides a vivid picture of the final act in
the long-drawn-out struggle for power in China. Drawing on a wide
range of private papers, archival and Chinese-language sources,
Graham Hutchings has achieved the difficult feat of producing a
scholarly history that is also a real page turner. He has an
unerring ear for the arresting phrase, and writes with elegance and
élan. His pacy narrative, viewed through multiple prisms of a
varied cast of protagonists ranging from political and military
leaders to ‘ordinary’ individuals, is peppered with piquant detail
that brings the unfolding events of 1949 vividly to life.
*Bob Ash, Emeritus Professor, SOAS, University of London, UK*
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