6,597 research outputs found
A comparative study of the one - china policy during the eras of Chiang Khai-Shek and Chiang Ching-Kuo
Abstract of Thesis
The title of this thesis is A comparative study of the one \ue2 china policy during the eras of Chiang Khai-Shek and Chiang Ching-Kuo. According to the relationship of the China Government and Taiwan, the cooperation on economic issue but the conflict in political ones, and the most controversial issue now is \ue2 One-China \ue2 policy. Both sides of Taiwan Strait, the Authorities have the different explanations of it because the different of the histories and backgrounds between Taiwan and China since Ming and Ching dynasties.
On this thesis, it discuss the policies of Chiang Khai-Shek and Chiang Ching-Kuo \ue2s eras to handle this problem especially the international relationship of Taiwan and China during that times. After World War \ue2\ua1, America becomes a big country to be a turn point of the relationship between Taiwan and China, that \ue2s what this thesis is written and discussion.
According to the different background and histories, it do a comparative study of the policies between Chiang Khai-Shek and Chiang Ching-Kuo in final chapter
Chiang Ching-Kuo (1910-1988): una vida interesante en el corto siglo XX chino
Chiang Ching-kuo (1910-1988) is an essential figure to understand the contemporary Chinese world. This article examines the most important chapters of his life, from his experience in the Soviet Union until his presidency in Taiwan during the 1970s and 1980s. Chiang Ching-kuo’s vital trajectory allows us to study the complexities behind the particular Chinese modernization project that materialised in the island as a result of the combination of both exogenous and endogenous elements and a degree of contingency that was not expected by the political elite of the Kuomintang. This work seeks to contribute to the development of the Chinese and Taiwanese studies in Spanish. It advances the concept of “Chinese short century” and opens up new avenues for future research that seek to cast into doubt the dominant discourse around the “Taiwanese miracle”.Chiang Ching-kuo (1910-1988) es una figura imprescindible en la comprensión del Mundo Chino contemporáneo. El presente artículo propone una aproximación a través de los capítulos más importantes de su vida, desde su experiencia en la Unión Soviética hasta su presidencia de Taiwán durante la década de los años setenta y ochenta. La trayectoria vital de Chiang Ching-kuo permite asomarse al complejo nudo de relaciones existentes detrás del especifico proyecto modernizador chino que se cristalizó en la isla debido a una combinación de elementos exógenos y endógenos con un grado de contingencia no prevista por la élite política del Kuomintang. Este trabajo, que busca contribuir al desarrollo de los estudios chinos y taiwaneses en español, propone el concepto de “un corto siglo chino” y sugiere nuevas líneas de investigación conducentes a cuestionar el discurso dominante sobre el “milagro taiwanés”
Jiangxi province (China), Chiang Ching-kuo's son
Chiang Ching-kuoGrayscaleForman Nitrate Negatives, Box
Jiangxi province (China), Chiang Ching-kuo and Harrison Forman
Chiang Ching-kuo'During the summer of 1943 Chiang often stayed at the school [New Village School]. . .The sign on his office simply said, 'Mister Chiang Ching-kuo'. . .Upstairs there is a small office with a rickety desk. Here Ching-kuo met at least two Americans, the journalist Harrison Forman, and Richard Service from the American consulate in Kuilin (p. 109).'Taylor, J. (2000). The Generalissimo's son: Chiang Ching-Kuo and the revolutions in China and Taiwan. Harvard University Press: Cambridge, Mass.GrayscaleForman Nitrate Negatives, Box
Deux versions des Mémoires de Chiang Ching-kuo, fils de Chiang Kai-shek, de son séjour en Union Soviétique
The subject of this work is the presentation of two contradictory versions of memoirs of Chiang Ching-kuo, son of Chiang Kai-shek, the president of the Republic of China’s until 1975, describing his twelve years’ stay in Soviet Union between 1925 and 1937. After his return to China, Chiang Ching-kuo assisted his father in his autocratic conduct of Chinese politics directed against Mao’s communists, at first in continental China and then in Taiwan. The first memoirs, published in 1947, glorify communist achievements in the Soviet Union during Chiang Ching-kuo stay there, but the second memoirs, on the contrary, vilify the communists and their deceitful, in the opinion of its author, ideology.
This work presents the French translation of the first memoirs, never yet fully translated into any European language, and points out the contradictions, omissions and distortions of reality in both of them. It tries to explain reasons lying behind those inconsistencies.</p
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