The recent surge in public remembrance of the Second World War in China has been substantially undergirded by a centrally planned and systematically implemented discursive shift which has remained overlooked in the literature. This study examines the revised official narrative by drawing on three cases from China's school curriculum, museums and formal diplomacy. It finds that the once dominant trope of “national victimization” no longer represents the main thrust in the Chinese Communist Party's (CCP) rhetoric on the Second World War. Under Xi Jinping, this has been replaced by a self-assertive and aspirational narrative of “national victory” and “national greatness,” designed to enhance Beijing's legitimacy and advance its domestic and fo...
Recent research on collective memory and war commemoration highlights the ‘conspicuous silence’ of w...
Until the 1980s, the People’s Republic of China was principally opposed to United Nations peacekeepi...
The Nanjing Massacre, a forbidden topic in China during the rule of Mao Zedong, is now central to th...
There is a common perception that the Chinese state promotes fabricated accounts of the Second World...
Remembering the War of Resistance against Japan, 1936-1945, has been a focal point in the collective...
From October 1950 to July 1953, the nascent Chinese state entered into a strategic alliance with Nor...
The concept of prospective memory has been suggested as a way of theorising the importance of forwar...
This article firstly proposes a briefly explanation about the concept the “Great Rejuvenation” of Ch...
The 1937 Nanjing Massacre holds a special place in public memory in China and plays an important rol...
Under the current Xi administration, China has marked December 13 as the national public Memorial Da...
The literature on World War II memory in China is skewed toward the history of the occupation and vi...
In 1931, Japan invaded Manchuria and established the puppet state of Manchukuo in northeast China. H...
A 2019-2020 Williams Prize for best essay in East Asian Studies was awarded to Yoojin Han (Berkeley ...
China’s defeat against British military forces in the Opium War (1839–1842) heralded a quest for a C...
The material disparity with the West, and the havoc wreaked in the period of Japanese imperial encro...
Recent research on collective memory and war commemoration highlights the ‘conspicuous silence’ of w...
Until the 1980s, the People’s Republic of China was principally opposed to United Nations peacekeepi...
The Nanjing Massacre, a forbidden topic in China during the rule of Mao Zedong, is now central to th...
There is a common perception that the Chinese state promotes fabricated accounts of the Second World...
Remembering the War of Resistance against Japan, 1936-1945, has been a focal point in the collective...
From October 1950 to July 1953, the nascent Chinese state entered into a strategic alliance with Nor...
The concept of prospective memory has been suggested as a way of theorising the importance of forwar...
This article firstly proposes a briefly explanation about the concept the “Great Rejuvenation” of Ch...
The 1937 Nanjing Massacre holds a special place in public memory in China and plays an important rol...
Under the current Xi administration, China has marked December 13 as the national public Memorial Da...
The literature on World War II memory in China is skewed toward the history of the occupation and vi...
In 1931, Japan invaded Manchuria and established the puppet state of Manchukuo in northeast China. H...
A 2019-2020 Williams Prize for best essay in East Asian Studies was awarded to Yoojin Han (Berkeley ...
China’s defeat against British military forces in the Opium War (1839–1842) heralded a quest for a C...
The material disparity with the West, and the havoc wreaked in the period of Japanese imperial encro...
Recent research on collective memory and war commemoration highlights the ‘conspicuous silence’ of w...
Until the 1980s, the People’s Republic of China was principally opposed to United Nations peacekeepi...
The Nanjing Massacre, a forbidden topic in China during the rule of Mao Zedong, is now central to th...