The People's Republic of amnesia
Material type:
TextPublication details: New York Oxford University Press, 2014Description: x, 248p., 16 unnumbered pages of plates : ill. (some col.), maps ; 25 cmISBN: - 9780190227913
- 951.058LIM
| Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
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Book
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UONGOZI Institute Resources Centre - Dar es Salaam | 951.058LIM (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 002776 |
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| 951.05092VOG Deng Xiaoping and the transformation of China | 951.0509LYN Mao | 951.058BAU Burying Mao Chinese politics in the age of Deng Xiaoping | 951.058LIM The People's Republic of amnesia | 951.05MAO Selected works of Mao Tse-Tung. | 951.05MAO Selected works of Mao Tse-Tung. | 951.05MAO Selected works of Mao Tse-Tung. |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 231-236) and index.
Despite its emergence from backward isolation into a dynamic world economic power, a quarter-century after the People's Army crushed unarmed protestors--labeled anti-revolutionaries--in Tiananmen Square on June 4, 1989, the defining event of China's modern history remains buried. Memory is dangerous in a country built to function on national amnesia. A single act of public remembrance might expose the frailty of the state's carefully constructed edifice of accepted history, one kept aloft by strict censorship, blatant falsehood, and willful forgetting. Though the consequences of Tiananmen Square are visible everywhere throughout China, what happened there has been consigned to silence. In The People's Republic of Amnesia, NPR's China correspondent Louisa Lim offers an insider's account of this seminal tragedy, revealing the enormous impact it had on China and the reverberations still felt today. Official hypocrisy and the government's obsession with maintaining stability and silence have deepened June 4th's impact on the nation's psyche. Lim interweaves portraits of eight individuals whose lives have been shaped by June 4--including the two women who started Tiananmen Mothers, one of the first and most prominent grassroots organizations outside the Chinese government's control; a student survivor involved in the protests; a soldier who took part in the suppression; and a high-ranking government administrator who played a role in ordering the tanks into the square. In the process she offers a textured, intimate, and haunting look at the national tragedy and an unhealed wound"
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