This book examines the development of wartime culture in the city of Guilin, Guangxi Province, in southwestern China during a major part of the country's war of resistance against Japanese invasion between 1938 and 1944. This study challenges existing historiography on China's wartime culture at three levels. First, the Guangxi warlord group played a crucial role in maintaining regional security, providing a liberalized political environment for wartime cultural activities and facilitating wartime nationalist-communist relations at both local and national levels. Second, wartime culture was more literary than political and it reflected a powerful intellectual vigor that was an indispensable component of China's war efforts. Intellectuals of different social and political backgrounds were their own organic selves feeling no pressure to come to intellectual consensus in literary production. Third, wartime culture was characterized by the active participation of many international groups, political organizations, and foreign individuals. The literary works produced in Guilin between 1938 and 1944 clearly reflected a combination of Chinese national and international anti-fascist and anti-military sentiment. Chinese literary masterpieces were translated into different foreign languages and noted foreign literature and political works were introduced to Chinese audiences through various cultural and political exchange programs in the city.
Title: Wartime Culture in Guilin, 1938-1944: A City at War
Author: Zhu, Pingchao
ISBN: 9780739196830
Binding:
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication Date: 2015-10-30
Number of Pages: 282
Weight: 0.7169 kg
Guilin, a small town in south China, is famous for its dramatic landscape of karst hills. During China's war with Japan in the 1930s and 1940s, it attracted refugees from east China, including many famous left-wing writers and artists. Zhu explains why they chose Guilin. Geographically, it was not as exposed to Japanese air attack. More important, though, it was ruled by the so-called Guangxi clique of warlords, who attempted to maintain political autonomy in defiance of the Nationalist regime of Chiang Kai-shek. Guangxi militarists encouraged refugee intellectuals to make Guilin a cultural center. Zhu offers an impressive list of the novels, poetry, newspapers, and plays produced there and an analysis of the city's connections with the Nationalists based in Chongqing and the Chinese Communists based in Yan'an. The final chapter discusses foreigners who visited, including the Vietnamese Communist leader Ho Chi Minh and the writer Ernest Hemingway. The author utilizes much Chinese-language scholarship on Guilin, such as an intriguing section on efforts to persuade Japanese POWs to renounce Japanese militarism. Of most interest to specialists on China's wartime culture. Summing Up: Recommended. Most academic levels/libraries. * CHOICE *
Individuals and even entire societies are processed by war and emerge from the experience changed. As this well-researched book illustrates, an excellent example of this phenomenon is what happened to Chinese society and Chinese intellectuals as a result of the Sino-Japanese War of 1937-1945.... Dr. Zhu does an excellent job of describing and analyzing the origins of this unique cultural phenomenon, .... This book is a truly scholarly work. For those interested in expanding their understanding of the Sino-Japanese War into the area of how culture and art were used to mobilize civilians and develop a spirit of resistance, this is a good book to read.... [F]or those who make the effort, learning the truths revealed in Dr. Zhu's study will make their efforts worthwhile. * Journal of Chinese Military History *
This book is indeed stimulating and refreshing. The author definitely fills up a gap in the studies of Chinese local history, which so far is far from satisfactory to any scholars or common readers. By carefully tracing the development of Guangxi history, the City of Guilin in particular, the book helps us greatly to understand China on the local level. The author obviously conquered a log of obstacles to obtain numerous original documents in support the book's compelling arguments. The book is a good example of scholars' great effort in bringing together a whole picture of the modern history of China against great odds. -- Xiansheng Tian, Metropolitan State University of Denver
In this locally-researched historical narrative, Pingchao Zhu discusses China's urban resistance against Japan, which has generally been ignored or treated only briefly by WWII historians. The wartime culture is all too commonly dismissed as a sterile phase of the CCP-KMT (or GMD) alliance in 1937-1945 or as a precursor of the upcoming civil war in 1946-1949. This book fills a major gap in our understanding of the anti-Japanese war in China. It provides a bottom-up approach by examining reactions and resistance to the war by traditional institutions, geopolitical powers, and social groups such as intellectuals, landowners, and warlords. It deserves a close reading. -- Xiaobing Li, University of Central Oklahoma
Pingchao Zhu's work on the city of Guilin during World War II is an important study on a city not under the direct purview of the Communists or Nationalists. Dr. Zhu's promising new work takes us inside the web of interactions between the Communists, Nationalists, and independent warlords, who were largely in control of Guilin, and shows us how the latter were able to manipulate affairs and individuals to realize their own ends and maintain a significant degree of freedom of action. Dr. Zhu sheds important light on how different segments of the Chinese populace responded to the Japanese threat and how the contenders for power jockeyed for influence at the local level. The book is an excellent and well-researched addition to the growing body of literature on the war of resistance against Japan that fills a major gap in the field and will be the standard work on wartime Guilin for years to come. -- Kenneth M. Swope, University of Southern Mississippi
This book is a fascinating study of Guilin, a city in southwestern China that was transformed from a relatively isolated area into a vibrant cultural center during WWII by prominent intellectuals and progressive warlords, who simultaneously embraced cultural nationalism and asserted regional identity. Written with remarkable insight and eloquence, this book is a significant addition to the existing literature on China during a pivotal period in its history. -- Yi Sun, University of San Diego