Reins of liberation : an entangled history of Mongolian independence, Chinese territoriality, and great power hegemony, 1911-1950

"The author?s purpose in writing this book is to use the Mongolian question to illuminate much larger issues of twentieth-century Asian history: how war, revolution, and great-power rivalries induced or restrained the formation of nationhood and territoriality. He thus continues the argument he...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Liu, Xiaoyuan, 1952-
Language:English
Subjects:
Summary:"The author?s purpose in writing this book is to use the Mongolian question to illuminate much larger issues of twentieth-century Asian history: how war, revolution, and great-power rivalries induced or restrained the formation of nationhood and territoriality. He thus continues the argument he made in Frontier Passages that on its way to building a communist state, the CCP was confronted by a series of fundamental issues pertinent to China?s transition to nation-statehood. The book?s focus is on the Mongolian question, which ran through Chinese politics in the first half of the twentieth century. Between the Revolution of 1911 and the Communists? triumph in 1949, the course of the Mongolian question best illustrates the genesis, clashes, and convergence of Chinese and Mongolian national identities and geopolitical visions."--Publisher description.
Physical Description:xxvii, 474 pages : maps ; 24 cm
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references (pages 437-452) and index.
Published: Washington, D.C. : Stanford, Calif. : Woodrow Wilson Center Press ; Stanford University Press, [2006]
ISBN:0804754268
9780804754262
Table of Contents:
  • Part I: Independence and revolution, 1911-1945
  • China and Mongolia: from empire to national states
  • Red protective deity: world revolution and geopolitics
  • Dialectics of brotherhood: the Chinese Communist Party and the Mongolian People's Republic
  • Part II: Autonomy and civil war, 1945-1950
  • National fever: the genesis of an autonomous movement
  • Ethnic strategy: the eastern Mongolian experience
  • Restoration: the Guomindang's administrative endeavor
  • Liberation: the Chinese Communist Party's interethnic approach
  • Part III: Ethnicity and hegemony, 1945-1950
  • New frontier: America's encounter with Inner Mongolia
  • The range of wild wind: Moscow's Inner Mongolia stratagem
  • The structure of bloc politics: Mao, Stalin, and Mongolian independence
  • Epilogue: territoriality, power, and legitimacy.