Mao: The Unknown StoryKnopf Doubleday Publishing Group, 2011年10月5日 - 864 頁 The most authoritative life of the Chinese leader every written, Mao: The Unknown Story is based on a decade of research, and on interviews with many of Mao’s close circle in China who have never talked before — and with virtually everyone outside China who had significant dealings with him. It is full of startling revelations, exploding the myth of the Long March, and showing a completely unknown Mao: he was not driven by idealism or ideology; his intimate and intricate relationship with Stalin went back to the 1920s, ultimately bringing him to power; he welcomed Japanese occupation of much of China; and he schemed, poisoned, and blackmailed to get his way. After Mao conquered China in 1949, his secret goal was to dominate the world. In chasing this dream he caused the deaths of 38 million people in the greatest famine in history. In all, well over 70 million Chinese perished under Mao’s rule — in peacetime. |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 91 筆
... American journalist Edgar Snow in 1936 , when Mao was strikingly dismissive , exaggerating the difference in their ages : " When I was 14 , my parents married me to a girl of 20. But I never lived with her ... I do not consider her my ...
... American . So an arrest warrant was issued in late August . Mao , who was leaving for Canton in any case , decided it was time to decamp . He did so in a sedan chair , heading first to Changsha and telling the bearers that if asked who ...
... American spokesman , Edgar Snow ) . Not only was the " uprising " not an authentic peasant undertaking , but Mao was not involved in any action - and actually sabotaged it . But he got what he was after - control of an armed force , of ...
... mao - zi , " Hairy Ones , " as they had more body hair than the Chinese . " German Hairy , " " Polish Hairy , " " American Hairy , " etc. , frequently cropped up in conversations among the Chinese . One probably 68 * 1928-1930.
... American Bible Institute . His success rang alarm bells in Western capitals , especially Washington , which now , for the first time , registered the Chinese Communists as a serious force . One reason was the death in combat of Seaman ...
內容
3 | |
10 | |
22 | |
33 | |
Mao and the First Red State 193134 age 3740 | 100 |
age 3740 | 109 |
How Mao got onto the Long March 193334 | 119 |
The Power behind the Throne 193435 age 4041 | 136 |
age 5960 | 373 |
War on Peasants 195356 age 5962 | 385 |
Undermining Khrushchev 195659 age 6265 | 397 |
age 3940 | 409 |
Chiang Lets the Reds | 418 |
age 6465 | 432 |
The Tibetans Rebel 195061 age 5667 | 445 |
Ambushed by the President 196162 age 6768 | 461 |
Monopolizing the Moscow Connection 1935 age 41 | 155 |
PART THREEBuilding His Power Base 15 The Timely Death of Maos Host 193536 age 4142 | 169 |
Chiang Kaishek Kidnapped 193536 age 4142 | 173 |
A National Player 1936 age 4243 | 182 |
New Image New Life and New Wife 193738 age 4344 | 188 |
Red Mole Triggers ChinaJapan War 193738 age 4344 | 197 |
Fight Rivals and ChiangNot Japan 193740 age 4346 | 207 |
Stalin Carves up China with Japan 193940 age 4546 | 216 |
Death Trap for His Own Men 194041 age 4647 | 224 |
Building a Power Base through Terror 194145 age 4751 | 232 |
age 4751 | 247 |
age 4851 | 259 |
PART FOURTo Conquer China 26 Revolutionary Opium War 193745 age 4351 | 267 |
age 5152 | 275 |
age 5053 | 287 |
age 5155 | 295 |
China Conquered 194649 age 5255 | 306 |
age 5559 | 317 |
PART FIVEChasing a Superpower Dream 32 Rivalry with Stalin 194749 age 5355 | 331 |
Two Tyrants Wrestle 194950 age 5556 | 340 |
Why Mao and Stalin Started the Korean War 194950 age 5556 | 350 |
Mao Milks the Korean War 195053 age 5659 | 359 |
age 6870 | 470 |
age 6871 | 476 |
PART SIXUnsweet Revenge | 493 |
The Great Purge 196667 age 7273 | 503 |
age 7280 | 517 |
The Chairmans New Outfit 196770 age 7376 | 526 |
A War Scare 196971 age 7577 | 537 |
Maoism Falls Flat on the World Stage 196670 age 7276 | 553 |
The Redbaiter Baited 197073 age 7679 | 567 |
The Boss Denies Chou Cancer Treatment | 579 |
age 7281 | 586 |
Enfeebled Mao Hedges His Bets 197376 age 7982 | 597 |
Last Days 197476 age 8082 | 610 |
Epilogue | 617 |
List of Interviewees | 623 |
Archives Consulted | 637 |
22 | 641 |
119 | 657 |
Bibliography of Chineselanguage Sources | 725 |
Bibliography of NonChineselanguage Sources | 753 |
Index | 777 |