Lexington Books
Pages: 260
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7391-6572-0 • Hardback • March 2011 • $133.00 • (£102.00)
978-0-7391-6574-4 • eBook • March 2011 • $126.00 • (£97.00)
Catherine Lynch is Emeritus in the History Department, Eastern Connecticut State University, and Research Fellow in the Institute of Modern Chinese Thought and Culture at East China Normal University in Shanghai, China.
Robert B. Marks is the Richard and Billie Deihl Professor of History at Whittier College.
Paul G. Pickowicz is Distinguished Professor of History and Chinese Studies and holder of the Endowed Chair in Modern Chinese History at the University of California, San Diego.
Chapter 1 Introduction: Chinese Radicalism in Historical Context
Chapter 2 Chapter 1. Individualism and Nationalism in Early Twentieth-Century China: Chen Duxiu's Pre-Marxist Intellectual Commitments, 1904-1918
Chapter 3 Chapter 2. Radical Visions of Time in Modern China: The Utopianism of Mao Zedong and Liang Shuming
Chapter 4 Chapter 3. Peasant and Woman in Maoist Revolutionary Theory, 1920s-1950s
Chapter 5 Chapter 4. Mao and Tibet
Chapter 6 Chapter 5. Chinese Communists and the Environment
Chapter 7 Chapter 6. Post-Socialist Capitalism in Contemporary China
Chapter 8 Chapter 7. Independent Chinese Film: Seeing the Not-Usually-Visible in Rural China
Chapter 9 Chapter 8. The "Rise of China"?
In this welcome collection of essays, the authors examine many of the issues with which Meisner grappled, from Mao’s utopianism and the role of peasants in the Chinese revolution to China’s relation to American imperialism. This work is especially noteworthy not only because these topics remain relevant today but also because the essays cohere around an important theme: how to understand the legacy of the Chinese Revolution, both historically and with respect to the present.
— The China Journal
Radicalism, Revolution, and Reform in Modern China. . . .bring[s] us insights and analyses of modern China’s history and contemporary political situation. Understanding China today is a
profoundly challenging task. This volume…[is] very much worth the time and effort to read. . . .The work of scholars such as Maurice Meisner and his students can be of significant value in considering some aspects of China’s recent history.
— Historical Materalism: Research In Critical Marxist Theory
The impressive lineup of contributions to this book is timely and refreshing. Together they remind us of what-in a gilded age of dissipation in China-must not be forgotten: an essential critical theorization of China's lost world, in which revolutionary and socialist struggle moved millions upon millions of people who shone in their idealism, heroism, sacrifice and, indeed, common sense.
— Lin Chun, London School of Economics
This is a volume that does full honor to the historian to whom it is dedicated: Maurice Meisner. The essays, which span the history of revolution and radicalism in China from the 19th to the 21st centuries, raise fundamental questions, not only about the history of China, but about the nature of radical change itself. Each essay insists, as Meisner himself has done throughout his scholarly life, on the relevance of China's revolutionary past to its present and to the present situation of us all.
— Marilyn B. Young, author of The Vietnam Wars, 1945–1990
The conference that produced this festschrift was held on the 20th anniversary of the Tiananmen massacre-symbolically appropriate to honor Maurice Meisner, whose signal contribution was to test the realities of Chinese Communism against the ideals of Marxism. In contrast to some works of the genre, this festschrift is marked by thematic coherence and academic rigor-a fitting tribute to a distinguished scholar and beloved teacher.
— John Israel, Professor Emeritus of History, University of Virginia