This paper argues that acknowledging individual victims had been a crucial problem in writing the history of the Cultural Revolution and represents the major division between the official history and the parallel history. The author discusses the victims in the history of the Cultural Revolution from factual, interpretational and methodological aspects
I have been researching transcultural Intellectuals throughout the cultural revolution in China that...
One of the areas that the advent of the Internet has changed most profoundly is the relationship tha...
In places like contemporary China, where legal adjudication for past wrongdoings is impossible, an a...
This paper argues that acknowledging individual victims had been a crucial problem in writing the hi...
This essay describes two forms of institutional redress for historic wrongs in contemporary China, a...
This project’s goal was to interview people who’d lived through the Cultural Revolution and extract ...
As the Cultural Revolution (CR) which took place in China between 1966-1976 unfolded in various degr...
“Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” (Santayana, 284) Although the Great...
Since the Communist Party of China published its brief official version of the Cultural Revolution i...
This paper suggests how control over transmission of memory by the Party, applying China’s own dynas...
David Kelly, researcher at the University of Technology Sydney, translated the following opinion pie...
Following the Japanese invasion of mainland China, and the subsequent Nanjing Massacre in 1937, Chin...
none1noThis article analyses The Memorial Hall for Victims of the Nanjing Massacre by Japanese Invad...
textAfter its demise in 1976, the Cultural Revolution has been conventionally portrayed as an era o...
The history of the People\u27s Republic of China is now an established discipline, with a built-in t...
I have been researching transcultural Intellectuals throughout the cultural revolution in China that...
One of the areas that the advent of the Internet has changed most profoundly is the relationship tha...
In places like contemporary China, where legal adjudication for past wrongdoings is impossible, an a...
This paper argues that acknowledging individual victims had been a crucial problem in writing the hi...
This essay describes two forms of institutional redress for historic wrongs in contemporary China, a...
This project’s goal was to interview people who’d lived through the Cultural Revolution and extract ...
As the Cultural Revolution (CR) which took place in China between 1966-1976 unfolded in various degr...
“Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” (Santayana, 284) Although the Great...
Since the Communist Party of China published its brief official version of the Cultural Revolution i...
This paper suggests how control over transmission of memory by the Party, applying China’s own dynas...
David Kelly, researcher at the University of Technology Sydney, translated the following opinion pie...
Following the Japanese invasion of mainland China, and the subsequent Nanjing Massacre in 1937, Chin...
none1noThis article analyses The Memorial Hall for Victims of the Nanjing Massacre by Japanese Invad...
textAfter its demise in 1976, the Cultural Revolution has been conventionally portrayed as an era o...
The history of the People\u27s Republic of China is now an established discipline, with a built-in t...
I have been researching transcultural Intellectuals throughout the cultural revolution in China that...
One of the areas that the advent of the Internet has changed most profoundly is the relationship tha...
In places like contemporary China, where legal adjudication for past wrongdoings is impossible, an a...