Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
A Note on Language
Introduction: Revolutionary Diplomacy and Diasporic Politics
1. The Chinese Nationalist Party and the Overseas Chinese
2. The Chinese Communist Party and the Overseas Chinese
3. The Diplomatic Battle between the Two Chinas
4. The Communal Battle between the Red and the Blue
5. Pribumi Perceptions of the "Chinese Problem"
6. The 1959–1960 Anti-Chinese Crisis
7. The Ambivalent Alliance between Beijing and Jakarta
8. China and the September Thirtieth Movement
9. Beijing, Taipei, and the Emerging Suharto Regime
10. The Overseas Chinese "Returning" to the People's Republic
Conclusion: "The Motherland Is a Distant Dream"
Notes
Glossary
Bibliography
Index
Taomo Zhou is Associate Professor in Chinese Studies and Dean's Chair in the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, National University of Singapore.
Impressively researched.
*Foreign Affairs*
The book is a delightful read and will be of great interest to
scholars of Chinese migration, PRC history, Indonesian history, and
the history of the international communist movement.
*South East Asia Research*
Zhou has produced a stunning synthesis of migration and diplomatic
history to demonstrate how international diplomacy is deeply
intertwined with the global movement of peoples across borders.
*Inside Indonesia*
Zhou makes important contributions to the fields of Chinese
studies, Asian and Cold War history and migration studies.
Migration in the Time of Revolution will likely remain an
authoritative work for years to come.
*China Quarterly*
In its two-decade sweep from the 1940s to 1960s, Migration in the
Time of Revolution disentangles a knotty diplomatic relationship
and analyzes its connections to Cold War strategies, tense domestic
politics, and population movements. As a result, the book will
appeal to scholars interested broadly in Asia, regional foreign
relations, and Cold War hot spots as well as to specialists in
mid-twentieth-century Southeast Asia, political violence in
Indonesia, and the Chinese diaspora.
*H-Asia*
Migration in the Time of Revolution is a truly remarkable
achievement that fuses diplomatic and social history. It sets new
standards for the study of Chinese in Southeast Asia and models the
possibly for research that is truly inter-Asian in scope while
contributing to and remaining grounded in Southeast Asian
Studies.
*2021 Harry J. Benda Book Prize Committee, Association for Asian
Studies*
Meticulously researched, Migration in the Time of Revolution:
China, Indonesia, and the Cold War by Taomo Zhou explores the fluid
and multidimensional connections between the Chinese diaspora in
Indonesia and their homeland, examining how the latter affected
China's geostrategic position in the early Cold War period. Zhou's
book makes important contributions to the study of diplomacy in
general, and Chinese foreign policy history in particular
*Pacific Affairs*
This is a protean and pathbreaking book that will serve as an
essential source for new research on the history of the ethnic
Chinese in Indonesia and international relations in Asia.
*Journal of Asian Studies*
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