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China Learns from the Soviet Union, 1949-Present Hua-Yu Li

China Learns from the Soviet Union, 1949-Present By Hua-Yu Li

China Learns from the Soviet Union, 1949-Present by Hua-Yu Li


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Summary

In this book an international group of scholars examines China's acceptance and ultimate rejection of Soviet models and practices in economic, cultural, social, and other realms.

China Learns from the Soviet Union, 1949-Present Summary

China Learns from the Soviet Union, 1949-Present by Hua-Yu Li

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China Learns from the Soviet Union, 1949-Present Reviews

This excellent and important volume will come as a revelation to many readers. Nearly every conceivable facet of the Sino-Soviet relationship is covered. The book's breadth reveals just how pervasive the Soviet model was in Chinese society, economics, politics, and culture. -- Robert Ross, Boston College
The Sino-Soviet relationship has played a critical role in the development of the People's Republic of China. Basing their analysis on recent documentation from Russia as well as China, the authors in this collection contribute fresh and important insights into the nature of that relationship. It should be essential reading for anyone seeking to understand the evolution of Chinese domestic politics and foreign policy. -- Steven M. Goldstein, Smith College
At the recent 60th anniversary of the People's Republic of China (PRC), an old slogan was repeated: 'Without the Chinese Communist Party there would be no New China.' We might also say: 'Without the Soviet Union, there would be no Communist Party of China,' and 'Without the Soviet Union, there would be no People's Republic of China.' The Chinese Communist Party grew up in the Stalinist era. Today, after three decades of market reform, there is still a Soviet DNA in its political culture. The essays in this volume, compiled by an outstanding group of international scholars, trace the story of China's most important foreign relationship in its periods of tutelage, partnership, and tension. They remind us that, whether as mentor or rival, revolutionary or revisionist, no foreign state has had greater weight in modern China than the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. -- William C. Kirby, Harvard University
This book is a fantastic resource for professors and students alike. It is a major work that will help scholars around the world to better understand the Soviet model's enduring legacy and how it affected and will continue to affect modern China. * China Quarterly *
The book contains a wealth of interesting and cogently presented perspectives on the Sino-Soviet relationship. It is highly recommended for both the specialist and the general reader. * The China Journal *
Although this tale of less than brotherly love is a familiar one, this volume provides a wealth of detail based on extensive field research and archival work, explaining exactly how, what, and why China borrowed from Soviet experience. Resulting from a 2007 international conference involving established scholars and younger researchers, the volume also goes well beyond conventional wisdom in the study of Sino-Soviet alliance relations to address the complex set of circumstances that set limits to Chinese emulation and to the Sino-Soviet relationship itself. * Slavic Review *
A sample of the soul-searching going on in Chinese academic circles about the reasons for the collapse of the Soviet Union, a subject that deserves greater attention for what it tells us about Chinese thinking regarding China's own current political and economic challenges. * Slavic Studies *

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Preface Chapter 2 Introduction: The Complexities of Learning from the Soviet Union Part 3 I. The Ups and Downs of Sino-Soviet Relations Chapter 4 1. Sino-Soviet Relations during the Mao Years, 1949-1969 Chapter 5 2. The Main Causes for the Return of the Chinese Changchun Railway to China and its Impact on Sino-Soviet Relations Chapter 6 3. Only a Handshake but no Embrace: Sino-Soviet Normalization in the 1980s Part 7 II. Ideological and Military Influences Chapter 8 4. Instilling Stalinism in Chinese Party Members: Absorbing Stalin's Short Course in the 1950s Chapter 9 5. The Soviet Model and the Breakdown of the Military Alliance Part 10 III. Soviet Economic Assistance and Socialist Transformation Chapter 11 6. How to Build a Modern Economy: China Learns from the Soviet Union Chapter 12 7. Get Organized: The Impact of the Soviet Model on the CCP's Rural Economic Strategy, 1949-l953 Chapter 13 8. Implementing the Soviet Model of State Farms in China Part 14 IV. Society Chapter 15 9. Labor is Glorious: Model Laborers in the PRC Chapter 16 10. The Influence of Soviet Union on Gender Equality in China in the l950s Part 17 V. Soviet Influence on Science and Education Chapter 18 11. The Political Dimensions of Soviet-Chinese Academic Interactions in the l950s: Questioning the Impact -Response Approach Chapter 19 12. Three Blows of the Shoulder Pole: Soviet Experts at Chinese People's University, 1950-1957 Chapter 20 13. Lysenkoism and the Suppression of Genetics in the PRC, 1949-1956 Chapter 21 14. Between Revolutions: Chinese Students in Soviet Institutes, 1948-l966 Part 22 VI. Literature and Film Chapter 23 15. Coming of Age in the Brave New World: The Changing Reception of the Soviet Novel, How the Steel was Tempered, in the PRC Chapter 24 16. Film and Gender in Sino-Soviet Cultural Exchange, 1949-69 Part 25 VII. The Era of Reform and the Impact of the Soviet Collapse Chapter 26 17. China's Concurrent Debate about the Gorbachev Era Chapter 27 18. Fate of the Soviet Model of Multinational State-Building in the PRC Chapter 28 19. The Impact of the Collapse of the Soviet Union on China's Political Choices Chapter 29 Concluding Assessment

Additional information

NLS9780739142233
9780739142233
0739142232
China Learns from the Soviet Union, 1949-Present by Hua-Yu Li
New
Paperback
Lexington Books
2011-06-23
562
N/A
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