biographiesofFranzKafka

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Saturday, 3 August 2013

Book review: 'China's War with Japan, 1937-1945: The Struggle for Survival' by Rana Mitter

Posted on 22:03 by Unknown
Reviewed by Richard Overy


Where does the modern Chinese superpower come from? Only 75 years ago, China was divided, impoverished, economically exploited and at war with ambitiously imperialist Japan. The notional rulers of China, Chiang Kai-shek and his nationalist Kuomintang party, controlled a shrinking area of central and south-west China, fighting the Japanese with a poorly armed and trained army, and sometimes fighting the Chinese communists ensconced in China's north-west. In 1940, the Chinese nationalists seemed close to defeat and Japan's vision of a "Great East Asia Co‑Prosperity Sphere" (a Japanese-dominated Asian new order) looked closer than ever to achievement. Somehow, the rump independent China survived and, against considerable odds, became one of the victorious allies in 1945. But how?
The answer to this question has never much bothered western historians, who, for better or worse, have focused on what they see as the real war in Europe and the Pacific, where easily identifiable victories can be found and the explanation is clear. It is that neglect which has prompted Rana Mitter, professor of Chinese history at Oxford, to write the first full account of China's wartime resistance against Japan, restoring a vital part of the wartime narrative to its rightful place. Now, for the first time, it is possible to assess the impact of the war on Chinese society and the many factors that explain the Japanese failure in China and the eventual triumph of Mao Zedong's communists in 1949, from which the superpower has grown. It is a remarkable story, told with humanity and intelligence; all historians of the second world war will be in Mitter's debt.
The sheer scale and complexity of the Sino-Japanese war is daunting enough and Mitter, perhaps wisely, does not get bogged down in the technical and tactical details of how the war was fought. There were armies numbering millions on both sides, a fact that explains why the Japanese expansion in the Pacific theatre ran out of steam in 1942. The Chinese war effort could not hope to match that of the more developed states, but it dominated the administrative and economic spheres in China, while condemning tens of millions of Chinese to high levels of deprivation and hunger throughout the conflict. Mitter does not add to the debate about deaths, occasioned by the obvious absence of reliable statistics, but suggests the current estimates of between 15 and 20 million dead may not be wide of the mark; at the least, more than 90 million Chinese became refugees in their own country.
Moreover, the war encouraged the political fragmentation of Chinese territory as Japanese encroachments grew. In the north and east, the Japanese conquered large areas, where they installed and collaborated with puppet regimes, including Puyi (the last emperor) in Manchuria. Mongolia was more or less under Soviet domination. In the south and east, rival warlords maintained an uneasy relationship with Chiang's nationalists. In Nanjing, Chiang's former colleague Wang Jingwei set up a rival nationalist government under Japanese supervision in 1940. In the north-west, Mao Zedong and Zhou Enlai created a communist-dominated territory in Yan'an. Making sense of the different polities is a challenge in its own right, but the many divisions also explain not only the difficulty Chiang had in ever establishing an integrated, sovereign Chinese state, but the problems faced by the Japanese as they confronted the vast land area and the mosaic of local rulers.
Mitter explores this complex politics with remarkable clarity and economy. At the heart of the story is Chiang Kai‑shek, the one leader the West or Stalin ever took seriously. ..
http://www.theguardian.com/books/2013/jun/06/china-war-japan-rana-mitter-review
China's War with Japan 1937-45  - Fragments of other histories beginning to emerge
The official history of China, much rewritten in recent times, is full of questionable propositions. Important among them is the assertion that China’s contemporary attitudes are determined by a century of “national humiliation” at the hands of foreigners – from the mid-19th century until the victory of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in the civil war in 1949.  China certainly suffered the aggression of upstart powers, including Britain, which was intent on trade. When trade was refused, conflict followed. Yet, for the most part, the national response to foreign incursion was less a sense of humiliation than a painful reflection on what had gone wrong with a once mighty country and a search for modernising options that might restore its power.  It was not until China lost the first Sino- Japanese war in 1895 that the word humiliation first appeared in this context. China regarded its smaller neighbours as tributary states. To be annoyed by western barbarians was one thing; to lose a war against the “northern dwarves”, as China’s president Chiang Kai-shek once described the Japanese in his diaries, was quite another...  http://www.newstatesman.com/2013/06/red-dawn

Review by Johnathan Mirsky

Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in Books and literature, China, Global War and Violence, history, Japan | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home
View mobile version

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Book review: The Frankfurt School at War - the Marxists Who Explained the Nazis to Washington
    Secret Reports on Nazi Germany: The Frankfurt School Contribution to the War Effort ,  by FRANZ NEUMANN, HERBERT MARCUSE, and OTTO KIRCHHEIM...
  • Al Worden: ‘The loneliest human being’
    What’s it like to be the most isolated human in all eternity? BBC space correspondent meets Al Worden, command module pilot of Apollo 15, wh...
  • Academic reforms and DU's circus of reason
    हम होंगे baccalaureate  हम होंगे baccalaureate  Associate baccalaureate  एक दिन हमे VC में है विश्वास पूरा है विश्वास हम होंगे baccalaureate...
  • VIJAY PRASHAD: Mr. Modi Wants to Come to America
    ... Modi has been at the helm in that state since 2001. The following year, in 2002, Modi presided over the mass killing of Muslims by his p...
  • Atheist Siddaramaiah and God's changing role in politics
    K. Siddaramaiah, a rare Indian politician who wears his atheism on his sleeve, took the oath as the next chief minister of Karnataka on Mond...
  • Kabita Chakma: Sexual violence, indigenous Jumma women & Chittagong Hill Tracts, Bangladesh
    There has been a high rate of violence against women all over Bangladesh in recent years. Kapaeeng Foundation figures for January 2007 to De...
  • The Act of Killing is being hailed by critics as one of the best films of the year
    'You celebrate mass killing so you don't have to look yourself in the mirror'  Joshua Oppenheimer went to Indonesia to make a d...
  • PAUL KRUGMAN - Hitting China’s Wall
    All economic data are best viewed as a peculiarly boring genre of science fiction, but Chinese data are even more fictional than most. Add a...
  • अयोध्या : तीन पीढ़ियां तीन दृष्टिकोण - के पी सिंह, फैजाबाद
    जन्नतनशीन रहीमुल्ला के एक दिसम्बर, 1936 को पैदा हुए बेटे लाल मोहम्मद 22-23 दिसम्बर, 1949 की उस रात के गिने-चुने प्रत्यक्षदर्शियों में से हैं...
  • MURTAZA HAIDER - Islam at war – with itself
    Muslim societies have thus evolved into places where revenge is confused with justice, forgiveness with weakness, and peace with cowardice. ...

Categories

  • A K Ramanujan's Three Hundred Ramayanas (1)
  • Afghanistan (7)
  • Africa (9)
  • Ahimsa (17)
  • animals (2)
  • Art (4)
  • Astronomy (9)
  • Bangladesh (23)
  • birds (5)
  • Books and literature (40)
  • Burma (4)
  • CARTOONS (2)
  • censorship (33)
  • childhood (15)
  • China (23)
  • communalism (85)
  • corruption (24)
  • critical theory (34)
  • current affairs - India (139)
  • current affairs - international (51)
  • democratic protest (40)
  • Dilip's notes and articles (6)
  • ecology (36)
  • economics (23)
  • education (14)
  • energy (2)
  • Evolution (2)
  • films (3)
  • Global War and Violence (52)
  • history (81)
  • human rights (89)
  • Indian culture (13)
  • Japan (2)
  • justice (100)
  • labour matters (27)
  • media (26)
  • medicine (6)
  • Middle East (27)
  • mining (13)
  • music (2)
  • naxalism (20)
  • Nepal (2)
  • Obituary (6)
  • organised crime (30)
  • Pakistan (30)
  • Palestine / Israel (5)
  • Partition related texts (3)
  • philosophy (10)
  • Photos (16)
  • Poetry (2)
  • religion (23)
  • Russia (10)
  • Sampradayikta Virodhi Andolan (2)
  • satire (2)
  • science (20)
  • short stories (2)
  • Social networking (8)
  • Sri Lanka (2)
  • the human mind (36)
  • the oceans (6)
  • thinking about fascism (68)
  • Tibet (3)
  • women's rights (32)
  • Workers' movements (9)

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (500)
    • ▼  August (29)
      • Aligarh academics call for reinstating Durga Nagpal
      • Durga Nagpal's classmate nearly killed for taking ...
      • March on Washington leader John Lewis: 'This is no...
      • Rashmi Singh - Migrant Workers in the Kashmir Valley
      • Books Reviewed: TWO NEW BOOKS ABOUT “BORGES”
      • Ishrat Jahan case: P P Pandey's bail plea rejected
      • Shameless abuse of power by UP government - Writer...
      • Remembering Hiroshima & Nagasaki, August 1945 - Ex...
      • Jacob Silverman - Why is the world's biggest landf...
      • 12 hours a day, 6 days a week - the woman who near...
      • MR Venkatesh - Indian economy comes to a fullstop
      • When will governments erase mafia writ on governance?
      • Wakf board panel defends suspended IAS officer Dur...
      • Burma - Preachers of Hate
      • Can love be a force for political change?
      • The 50 most perfectly timed photos ever!
      • Zero-hours contract workers - the new reserve army...
      • Suzanne Moore - Twitter boycott is my small symbol...
      • How to Be a Rogue Superpower A Manual for the 21s...
      • Truth vs Hype: The house of Yadavs
      • Mumbai teenager leaves red-light zone for US degree
      • James Bamford on domestic surveillance in the USA ...
      • Book review: Burma: The Despots and the Laughter
      • A historian of hope - Natalie Zemon Davis
      • अयोध्या : तीन पीढ़ियां तीन दृष्टिकोण - के पी सिंह,...
      • Book review: 'China's War with Japan, 1937-1945: T...
      • IAS officer Durga Shakti Nagpal defends herself //...
      • South Africa- When reality seems like satire
      • Economists on the Wrong Foot: a critique of Jagdis...
    • ►  July (119)
    • ►  June (133)
    • ►  May (114)
    • ►  April (100)
    • ►  March (5)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile