Power of freedom : : Hu Shih's political writings / / edited by Chih-p'ing Chou and Carlos Yu-Kai Lin.

Dr. Hu Shih (1891-1962) was one of China's top scholars and diplomats and served as the Republic of China's ambassador to the United States during World War II. As early as 1941, Hu Shih warned of the fundamental ideological conflict between dictatorial totalitarianism and democratic syst...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Superior document:China Understandings Today
:
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Ann Arbor, Michigan : : University of Michigan Press,, 2022.
©2022
Year of Publication:2022
Language:English
Chinese
Series:China understandings today.
Physical Description:1 online resource (385 pages)
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction I:A Chinese Diplomat in the Cold War: Hu Shih's View on International PoliticsCarlos Yu-Kai LinIntroduction II:Hu Shih's Anti-Communist ThoughtChih-ping ChouChapter 1: "Do We Need or Want Dictatorship?"Chapter 2: "Family of Nations"Chapter 3: "The New Disorder in East Asia and the World at Large"Chapter 4: "China and the World War"Chapter 5: "Historical Foundations for a Democratic China"Chapter 6: "Ambassador Hu Shih Describes China's Ten-Year Fight for Freedom, Struggle Against Aggression"Chapter 7: "The Conflict of Ideologies"Chapter 8: "The Chinese Revolution"Chapter 9: "China in Stalin's Grand Strategy"Chapter 10: "The Free World Needs a Free China"Chapter 11: "Address to the Commonwealth Club of San Francisco, CA. in The Commonwealth, 1950"Chapter 12: "Why the Main War Will Be Fought in Asia-Not Europe"Chapter 13: "Communism in China"Chapter 14: "My Former Student, Mao Tse-tung"Chapter 15: Book review of John deFrancis's Nationalism and Language Reform in ChinaChapter 16: "How to Understand a Decade of Rapidly Deteriorated Sino-American Relations"Chapter 17: "Communism, Democracy, and Culture Pattern"Chapter 18: "China Seven Years after Yalta"Chapter 19: "Suffering Chinese Intellectuals Behind the Iron Curtain"Chapter 20: "China in Distress"Chapter 21: "The Three Stages of the Campaign for Thought Reform in Communist China"Chapter 22: "'Introduction' to Liu Shaw-tong's Out of Red China"Chapter 23: "'Introduction' to John Leighton Stuart's Fifty Years in China"Chapter 24: "Communist Propaganda and the Fall of China"Chapter 25: "How Free is Formosa?"Chapter 26: "The Right to Doubt in Ancient Chinese Thought"Chapter 27: "The Importance of a Free China"Chapter 28: "Intellectual China Still Resistant to Communist Dictatorship: The Suffering Intellectuals in Red China"Chapter 29: "The Communist Regime in China is Unstable and Shaky"Chapter 30: "A Sum-up and a Warning"Chapter 31: "John Dewey in China"Chapter 32: "China's Lesson for Freedom"Chapter 33: "The Conflict Between Man's Right to Knowledge and the Security of the Community"Chapter 34: "The Chinese Tradition and the Future".