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The Tragedy of Liberation: A History of the Chinese Revolution 1945-1957 Hardcover – September 24, 2013
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A groundbreaking chronicle of the violent early years of the People’s Republic of China, by the author of the BBC Samuel Johnson Prize–winning Mao’s Great Famine.
“The Chinese Communist party refers to its victory in 1949 as a ‘liberation.’ In China the story of liberation and the revolution that followed is not one of peace, liberty, and justice. It is first and foremost a story of calculated terror and systematic violence.” So begins Frank Dikötter’s stunning and revelatory chronicle of Mao Zedong’s ascension and campaign to transform the Chinese into what the party called New People. Following the defeat of Chiang Kai-shek in 1949, after a bloody civil war, Mao hoisted the red flag over Beijing’s Forbidden City, and the world watched as the Communist revolution began to wash away the old order. Due to the secrecy surrounding the country’s records, little has been known before now about the eight years that followed, preceding the massive famine and Great Leap Forward.
Drawing on hundreds of previously classified documents, secret police reports, unexpurgated versions of leadership speeches, eyewitness accounts of those who survived, and more, The Tragedy of Liberationbears witness to a shocking, largely untold history. Interweaving stories of ordinary citizens with tales of the brutal politics of Mao’s court, Frank Dikötter illuminates those who shaped the “liberation” and the horrific policies they implemented in the name of progress. People of all walks of life were caught up in the tragedy that unfolded, and whether or not they supported the revolution, all of them were asked to write confessions, denounce their friends, and answer queries about their political reliability. One victim of thought reform called it a “carefully cultivated Auschwitz of the mind.” Told with great narrative sweep, The Tragedy of Liberation is a powerful and important document giving voice at last to the millions who were lost, and casting new light on the foundations of one of the most powerful regimes of the twenty-first century.
- Print length400 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherBloomsbury Press
- Publication dateSeptember 24, 2013
- Dimensions6.44 x 1.43 x 9.43 inches
- ISBN-101620403471
- ISBN-13978-1620403471
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“Frank Dikötter's The Tragedy of Liberation just might force Mao's fans to look reality in the eye―and grow up…With Mao's Famine and The Tragedy of Liberation, Mr. Dikötter has created the first two parts of an important trilogy…As someone who did witness the Cultural Revolution firsthand, as a diplomat in Beijing from 1966 to 1969, I look forward to Mr. Dikötter's analysis in his final volume.” ―Wall Street Journal
“Dikotter probes beneath the surface of what some still see as a relatively benign early phase of Mao's rule, when the Communists restored political order and the economy, combated social evils, and allowed a modicum of personal freedom. He reveals the cost of what he calls a policy of ‘calculated terror and systematic violence.'… Dikotter is a pioneering Western user of Chinese provincial archives, and given China's vast size and social complexity, his project is opening up a vast, comprehensive panorama of suffering.” ―Foreign Affairs
“As he did in his previous work, Dikötter wades deep into the grim reality…[and] marshals his meticulous research to show how Mao continually set up expectations only to mow them viciously down. Under the "shiny surface" of Mao's propaganda, the author ably reveals the violence and misery.” ―Kirkus Reviews
“Dikötter's Mao's Great Famine (2010) won the BBC Samuel Johnson Prize for Non-Fiction in 2011, and his prequel is just as well composed and heartbreaking to read…. a vital study of a crucial period of history.” ―Publishers Weekly
“A mesmerizing account of the communist revolution in China, and the subsequent transformation of hundreds of millions of lives through violence, coercion and broken promises. The Chinese themselves suppress this history, but for anyone who wants to understand the current Beijing regime, this is essential background reading.” ―Anne Applebaum
“One-party states take control of the past as they take control of societies. Usually they must end for serious historical discussion to begin. A great intellectual challenge of our century is to historicize the People's Republic even as it continues to exist. Dikötter performs here a tremendous service by making legible the hugely controversial origins of the present Chinese political order.” ―Tim Snyder
“The Tragedy of Liberation is a tightly-written narrative of the twelve most pivotal years in modern Chinese history ... a dispassionate study of the way nations can pervert optimism and descend into lunacy by steady increments… it is essential reading.” ―The Times
“Groundbreaking… Frank Dikotter is already the author of a revelatory book about China's great famine of 1958-62, and in this prequel – unsparing in its detail, relentless in its research, unforgiving in its judgments – he deals in the same way with the Chinese revolution from 1945 to 1957… It is clear to this reviewer, at least, that mainstream academic scholarship must also be revised in the light of Dikotter's work. In particular, volume 14 of the Cambridge History of China, which covers the period of this book, will have to be rewritten'” ―Sunday Times
“Nobody who reads about the cost of the establishment of the PRC in Dikotter's humane and lucid prose will find much sympathy for the authoritarian case. This excellent book is horrific but essential reading for all who want to understand the darkness that lies at the heart of one of the world's most important revolutions” ―Guardian
“The book is a remarkable work of archival research…Dikotter sustains a strong human dimension to the story by skillfully weaving individual voices through the length of the book.” ―Financial Times
“With a mixture of passion and ruthlessness, he marshals the facts, many of them recently unearthed in party archives. Out of these, Mr Dikotter constructs a devastating case for how extreme violence, not a moral mandate, was at the heart of how the party got to power, and of how it then governed ... He was ready to lead the country into the giant experiment of the Great Leap Forward. Mr Dikotter has already written about that in "Mao's Great Famine", which this book only betters. The final volume of his planned trilogy will be on the Cultural Revolution, bringing the curtain down on a truly disastrous period.” ―Economist
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
THE TRAGEDY OF LIBERATION
A HISTORY OF THE CHINESE REVOLUTION, 1945-57
By FRANK DIKÖTTERBLOOMSBURY PRESS
Copyright © 2013 Frank DikotterAll rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-62040-347-1
Contents
Preface, ix,Chronology, xv,
Map, xx,
PART ONE: Conquest (1945-49),
1 Siege, 3,
2 War, 9,
PART TWO: Takeover (1949-52),
3 Liberation, 39,
4 The Hurricane, 63,
5 The Great Terror, 84,
6 The Bamboo Curtain, 103,
7 War Again, 128,
PART THREE: Regimentation (1952-56),
8 The Purge, 155,
9 Thought Reform, 174,
10 The Road to Serfdom, 207,
11 High Tide, 226,
12 The Gulag, 243,
PART FOUR: Backlash (1956-57),
13 Behind the Scenes, 257,
14 Poisonous Weeds, 275,
Notes, 297,
Select Bibliography, 339,
Acknowledgements, 363,
Index, 365,
CHAPTER 1
Siege
When workers in Changchun started digging trenches for a new irrigation system in the summer of 2006, they made a gruesome discovery. The rich black soil was clogged with human remains. Below a metre of earth were thousands of skeletons closely packed together. When they dug deeper, the workers found several more layers of bones, stacked up like firewood. A crowd of local residents, gathered around the excavated area, was taken aback by the sheer size of the burial site. Some thought that the bodies belonged to victims of the Japanese occupation during the Second World War. Nobody except an elderly man realised that they had just stumbled on remnants of the civil war that had resumed after 1945 between Mao Zedong's communists and Chiang Kai-shek's nationalists.
In 1948 the communists had laid siege to Changchun for five months, starving out a nationalist garrison stationed inside the city walls. Victory came at a heavy cost. At least 160,000 civilians died of hunger during the blockade. After liberation the communist troops buried many of the bodies in mass graves without so much as a tombstone, a name plate or even a simple marker. After decades of propaganda about the peaceful liberation of China, few people remember the victims of the communist party's rise to power.
* * *
Changchun, in the middle of the vast Manchurian plain north of the Great Wall of China, was a minor trading town before the arrival of the railway in 1898. It developed rapidly as the junction between the South Manchurian Railway, run by the Japanese, and the Chinese Eastern Railway, owned by the Russians. In 1932 Changchun became the capital of Manchukuo, a puppet state of imperial Japan, which installed Henry Puyi, later known as the last emperor, as its Manchu ruler. The Japanese transformed the city into a modern, wheel-shaped city with broad avenues, shade trees and public works. Large, cream-coloured buildings for the imperial bureaucracy appeared beside spacious parks, while elegant villas were built for local collaborators and their Japanese advisers.
In August 1945, the Soviet army took over the city and, so far as they could, dismantled the factories, machines and materials, sending the war booty back by the trainload to the Soviet Union. Industrial installations were demolished, and many of the formerly handsome houses were stripped bare. The Soviets stayed until April 1946, when the nationalist army took over the city. Two months later, the civil war began, and Manchuria once again became a battlefield. The communist armies had the initiative and moved down from the north, cutting the railway that connected Changchun with nationalist strongholds further south.
In April 1948, the communists advanced towards Changchun itself. Led by Lin Biao, a gaunt man who had trained at the Whampoa Military Academy, they laid siege to the city. Lin was considered one of the best battleield commanders and a brilliant strategist. He was also ruthless. When he realised that Zheng Dongguo, the defending commander in Changchun, would not capitulate, he ordered the city to be starved into surrender. On 30 May 1948 came his command: 'Turn Changchun into a city of death.
Inside Changchun were some 500,000 civilians, many of them refugees who had fled the communist advance and were trapped in their journey south to Beijing after the railway lines had been cut. A hundred thousand nationalist troops were also garrisoned inside the city. Curfew was imposed almost immediately, keeping people indoors from eight at night to five in the morning. All able-bodied men were made to dig trenches. Nobody was allowed to leave. People who refused to be searched by sentries were liable to be shot on the spot. Yet an air of goodwill still prevailed in the first weeks of the siege, as emergency supplies were dropped by air. Some of the well-to-do even established a Changchun Mobilisation Committee, supplying sweets and cigarettes, comforting the wounded and setting up tea stalls for the men.
But soon the situation deteriorated. Changchun became an isolated island, beleaguered by 200,000 communist troops who dug tunnel defences and cut off the underground water supply to the city. Two dozen anti-aircraft guns and heavy artillery bombarded the city all day long, concentrating their fire on government buildings. The nationalists built three defensive lines of pillboxes around Changchun. Between the nationalists and the communists lay a vast no man's land soon taken over by bandits.
On 12 June 1948 Chiang Kai-shek cabled an order reversing the ban on people leaving the city. Even without enemy ire, his planes could not possibly parachute in enough supplies to meet the needs of an entire city. But the anti-aircraft artillery of the communists forced them to fly at an altitude of 3,000 metres. Many of the airdrops landed outside the area controlled by the nationalists. In order to prevent a famine, the nationalists encouraged the populace to head for the countryside. Once they had left they were not allowed back, as they could not be fed. Every departing refugee was subject to rigorous inspection. Metallic objects such as pots or pans as well as gold and silver and even salt, seen as a vital commodity, were prohibited. Then the refugees had to cross the no man's land, a dark and dangerous terrain dominated by gangs, usually army deserters, who preyed on the defenceless crowds. Many had guns and even horses; some used passwords. The most skilful refugees managed to conceal a piece of jewellery, a watch or a fountain pen, but those found to be hiding an earring or a bracelet in a seam of their clothing risked being shot. Sometimes all their clothes were snatched. A few saved their best belongings by bundling them deep inside a burlap bag filled with dirty rags, including urine-soaked baby clothes, in the hope that the smell would repel robbers.
Few ever made it past the communist lines. Lin Biao had placed a sentry every 50 metres along barbed wire and trenches 4 metres deep. Every exit was blocked. He reported to Mao: 'We don't allow the refugees to leave and exhort them to turn back. This method was very effective in the beginning, but later the famine got worse, and starving civilians would leave the city in droves at all times of day and night, and after we turned them down they started gathering in the area between our troops and the enemy.' Lin described how desperate the refugees were to be allowed through communist lines, explaining that they:
knelt in front of our troops in large groups and begged us to let them through. Some left their babies and small children with us and absconded, others hanged themselves in front of sentry posts. The soldiers who saw this misery lost their resolve, some even falling on their knees to weep with the starving people, saying, 'We are only following orders.' Others covertly allowed some of them through. After we corrected this, another tendency was discovered, namely the beating, tying up and shooting of refugees by soldiers, some to death (we do not as yet have any numbers for those injured or beaten to death).
Half a century later, Wang Junru explained what had happened when he was a soldier: 'We were told they were the enemy and they had to die.' Wang was fifteen when the communists forced him to enrol in the army. During the siege he joined the other soldiers ordered to drive back hungry civilians.
By the end of June, some 30,000 people were caught in the area between the communists, who would not allow them to pass, and the nationalists, who refused to let them back into the city. Hundreds died every day. Two months later, more than 150,000 civilians were pressed inside the death zone, reduced to eating grass and leaves, doomed to slow starvation. Dead bodies were strewn everywhere, their bellies bloated in the scorching sun. 'The pungent stench of decomposition was everywhere,' remembered one survivor.
The situation inside the city was little better. Besides the airdrops for the garrison, some 330 tonnes of grain were required daily to feed the civilians, although at best 84 tonnes were delivered by four or five planes, and often much less. Everything was requisitioned in the defence of Chang-chun. Chiang Kai-shek even prohibited private trading in August, threatening to shoot any merchant who contravened his order. Soon the nationalist soldiers turned on the civilians, stealing their food at gunpoint. They slaughtered all the army horses, then dogs, cats and birds. Ordinary people ate rotten sorghum and corncobs before stripping the bark from trees. Others ate insects or leather belts. A few turned to human flesh, sold at $1.20 a pound on the black market.
Cases of collective suicide occurred all the time. Entire families killed themselves to escape from the misery. Dozens died by the roadside every day. 'We were just lying in bed starving to death,' said Zhang Yinghua when interviewed about the famine that claimed the lives of her brother, her sister and most of her neighbours. 'We couldn't even crawl.' Song Zhanlin, another survivor, remembered how she passed a small house with the door ajar. 'I entered to have a look and saw a dozen bodies lying all over the place, on the bed and on the floor. Among those on the bed, one was resting his head on a pillow, and a girl was still embracing a baby: it looked as if they were asleep. The clock on the wall was still ticking away.'
Autumn saw temperatures plunge, and the survivors struggled to stay warm. They stripped floorboards, rooftops, sometimes entire buildings in the search for fuel. Trees were chopped down, even signboards were pilfered for wood. Asphalt was ripped from the streets. Like a slow-moving implosion, the gradual destruction of the city started in the suburbs and gradually rippled towards the centre. In the end 40 per cent of the housing went up in smoke. Heavy bombardment by artillery at point-blank range added to the misery, as ordinary people sheltered in shanties strewn with debris and decomposing bodies, while the nationalist top brass took refuge behind the massive concrete walls of the Central Bank of China.
Soldiers absconded throughout the siege. Unlike the civilians who were driven back, they were welcomed by the communists and promised good food and lenient treatment. Day and night loudspeakers beamed propaganda encouraging them to defect or rebel: 'Did you join the Guomindang army? You were dragged into it at a rope's end ... Come over to us ... There is no way out of Changchun now ...' Desertion rates soared after the summer, as the troops received a reduced ration of 300 grams of rice and flour a day.
The siege lasted 150 days. In the end, on 16 October 1948, Chiang ordered General Zheng Dongguo to evacuate the city and cut southwards to Shenyang, the first large city along the railway leading towards Beijing. 'If Changchun falls, do you really think Peiping [the name for Beijing before 1949] will be safe?' Zheng was asked. He gave a sigh: 'No place in China will be safe.'
Zheng had two armies to withdraw: the Sixtieth, composed mostly of dispirited soldiers from the subtropical province of Yunnan, and the New Seventh Army, made up of tough US-trained veterans who had fought on the Burma front. The Seventh stormed out as ordered, but failed to break through the blockade. The Sixtieth refused to leave, and in any event the soldiers were too weak to march all the way to Shenyang. They turned their guns against the Seventh and handed the city over to Lin Biao.
* * *
Hailed in China's history books as a decisive victory in the battle of Manchuria, the fall of Changchun came at huge cost, as an estimated 160,000 civilians were starved to death inside the area besieged by the communists. 'Changchun was like Hiroshima,' wrote Zhang Zhenglong, a lieutenant in the People's Liberation Army who documented the siege. 'The casualties were about the same. Hiroshima took nine seconds; Changchun took five months.
(Continues...)Excerpted from THE TRAGEDY OF LIBERATION by FRANK DIKÖTTER. Copyright © 2013 Frank Dikotter. Excerpted by permission of BLOOMSBURY PRESS.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Product details
- Publisher : Bloomsbury Press; 1st edition (September 24, 2013)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 400 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1620403471
- ISBN-13 : 978-1620403471
- Item Weight : 1.54 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.44 x 1.43 x 9.43 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #818,090 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #945 in Asian Politics
- #1,136 in Communism & Socialism (Books)
- #1,228 in Chinese History (Books)
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About the author

Frank Dikotter is the author of a dozen books that have changed the way we look at the history of modern China, including Mao's Great Famine, winner of the BBC Samuel Johnson Prize for Non-Fiction in 2011. His work has been translated into twenty languages, including The Tragedy of Liberation: A History of the Chinese Revolution 1945-1957, which was short-listed for the Orwell Prize in 2014, and The Cultural Revolution: A People's History, 1962-1976, the final volume in his trilogy on the Mao era. He is Chair Professor at the University of Hong Kong and Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution. More information can be found on his website at www.frankdikotter.com
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THIS BOOK IS THE FIRST OF THE TRILOGY OF THE MAOIST ERA, WRITTEN BY THE DUTCH HISTORIAN FRANK DIKÖTTER, IT COVERS
FROM 1945 AT THE END OF THE ASIA-PACIFIC WAR TO 1957 THE YEAR OF THE ANTIRIGHTIST PURGE ON THE EVE OF THE GREAT LEAP FORWARD.
THE COMMUNIST REVOLUTION IN CHINA
HAS BEEN PORTRAYED BY THE LEFTIST CIRCLES IN THE WEST AS A BENEVOLENT ONE THAT ENDED THE FOREIGN INTERFERENCE IN
CHNA, HOWEVER AS THE AUTHOR POINTS OUT THAT COULD BE NO FURTHER FROM THE TRUTH.
THE RED TERROR STARTED EVEN BEFORE THE
COMMUNIST TOOK THE POWER AS THE TOOKOVER IN MANCHURIA BY THE INFAMOUS GENERAL LIN BIAO IN 1948 DEMOSTRATES.
EVERY CITY AND TOWN THAT THEY TOOK OVER THE COMMUNISTS IMPOSED THE RED TERROR.
ONCE THEY TOOK OVER THE WHOLE COUNTRY IN 1949,THEY IMPOSED A TYRANNICAL AND TOTALITARIAN REGIME AS
THE COUNTRY NEVER EXPERIENCED BEFORE.
THE PREVIOUS REGIME OF THE NATIONALISTS OR KUOMINTANG OF GENERALISIMO CHIANG KAI SHEK HAD A LOT OF FLAWS, BUT NOTHING OF THE SORT OF THE ATROCIOUS MONSTUOSITY OF MAO AND HIS HENCHMENS.
MASS EXECUTIONS, GULAGS, FAMINE, DESTRUCTION OF PRIVATE PROPERY AND RELIGIOUS PERSECUTION WERE THE MAIN FEATURES OF THE REGIME FROM DAY ONE.
THE WHOLE SOCIETY WAS TORNED APART ,
THE BONDS OF FAMILY AND FRIENDSHIP WERE DESTROYED.
THE REGIME ENCOURAGED DENUNCIATIONS,
ALSO THE LONG SECCIONS OF INDOCTRINATION AND BRAIN WASHING THAT
POISONED THE MINDS OF THE PEOPLE, EVERYBODY WAS AGAINST EVERYBODY.
THE WORKERS AND THE PEASANTS IN WHOSE NAME THE REVOLUTION WAS DONE, WERE
SLAVES, THEY WERE EXPLOITED AND HUMILLIATED, THEY LACKED HOUSING,
HOUSING AND FOOD ; FAMINE WAS RAMPANT
IN THE WHOLE COUNTRY.
THE CULTURE AND THE ARTS WERE OBLITERATED (THE CULTURAL REVOLUTION OF 1966-1976 WILL DEEPEN THE PROCESS).
THE ECONOMY WAS DESTROYED AND THE
POVERTY WAS MUCH WORSE THAN IN THE KUOMINTANG REGIME.
THE WESTERN PRESENCE WAS SUBSTITUTED BY THE SOVIET ONE WHICH WAS MUCH WORSE AND HUMILLIATING.
ALL THE RELIGIOUS WERE SAVAGELY PERSECUTED, THE TEMPLES ( BUDDHISTS AND
TAOISTS), CHURCHES ( CATHOLICS AND PROTESTANTS) AND THE ISLAMIC MOSQUES
WERE RANSACKED AND LOOTED.
THE MAOIST REGIME (AS IN ALL OF THE
OTHERS COMMUNISTS REGIMES) , SOWED
DIVISION, DOSCORD, RESENTMENT AND
HATRED; ORIGINALLY MANY PEOPLE WELCOMED THE REDS, BUT SOON THEY REALIZED THAT THEY WERE MUCH WORSE
IN ALL THE ASPECTS THAN BEFORE, ALL
SORTS OF FREEDOMS WERE OBLITERATED,
AS A RESULT THERE WERE MANY PROTESTS
AND EVEN UPRISINGS AGAINST THE REGIME
THAT WERE SAVAGELY REPRESSED.
IN OCTOBER 1950 MAO INTERVENED IN
THE KOREAN WAR TO SUPPORT THE TOTALITARIAN COMMUNIST REGIME OF
KIM IL SUNG IN NORTH KOREA,WHO WAS
( WITH THE SUPPORT AND ENCOURAGEMENT
OF BOTH THE SOVIET UNION AND RED CHINA),THE RESPONSABLE OF THE OUTBREAK OF THE KOREAN WAR WITH
HIS AGGRESSION AGAINST THE SOUTH ON
JUNE 1950; THE CHINESE INTERVENTION
PROLONGUED UNNECESARILY THE KOREAN
WAR TO MORE THAN TWO YEARS AND A HALF,WITH THE HIGH COST OF HUMAN LIVES
ESPECIALLY IN THE CHINESE SIDE, THE COMMUNIST PROPAGANDA ALSO SPREAD
THE FALSE ACCUSATIONS THAT THE AMERICANS WERE USING GERM WARFARE,
THAT WAS A BLATANT LIE THAT WAS FINALLY
DISCARDED.
IT CAN BE SAID THAT MAO AND HIS HENCHMENS CREATED IN CHINA A HELL IN THE EARTH, THE BOOK ENDED IN 1957
WITH THE ANTIRIGHTIST PURGE, NEVERTHELESS MUCH WORSE THINGS WERE
TO COME WITH IN 1958 MAO UNLEASHED
THE GREAT LEAP FORWARD THAT WOULD
LAST FOUR AND LEFT IN ITS WAKE 45 MILLIONS OF DEATHS, THAT IS THE SECOND
VOLUME OF THE TRILOGY THAT I AM
CURRENTLY READING.
"Dead or alive, you will donate." - Head of the Peasant Association
Liberation is a very strong word in that when most people hear of it, they immediately think of it as a positive event. At least that's how I see it. To liberate something means to free it from oppression and slavery. But what if, as an ordinary civilian trying to live life and enjoying the fruits of your labor, have been caught between two sides of a very nasty civil war that has literally torn your province to shreds leaving you with nothing? Who is liberating who and does it actually matter as long as it will bring peace? Unfortunately for millions and millions of people, Mao Zedong's liberation is one that brought along with it mass violence, unrest, fear, uncertainty, doubt and killings that seems impossible to believe. The chapter on thought reform is especially brutal and hard to read. Physical pain through torture is one thing but how do you explain what goes on in a person's mind when being brainwashed and indoctrinated through "study sessions" day in and day out?
"You must hate even if you feel no hatred. You must kill even if you do not wish to kill."
Although information on Mao Zedong himself isn't the focal point of this series, we do get a good look at just how it was possible for him to command the entirety of China itself which is not so unlike the emperors during imperialism. As with every dictator, studying and learning of the tactics they use to obtain their goals and to remain in power is fascinating. Who would have thought that by just being vague in your orders can cause such chaos? It also highlights how Mao is a master at dividing and conquering. His program of denunciation and land reform is something that just has to be read. He conquered the people's mind and feasted on their fear and mistrust of others.
"My head is made of steel, bones and cement. It is beyond reform." - Liu Guoliao
Frank Dikotter did an amazing job writing this book. He uses many different sources to compile as accurate an picture as can be of what exactly happened during these beginning troubled years of China's transformation from imperialism into one of communism and socialism. Being a professor in a Hong Kong University, he actually knows how to teach and by that you won't have to worry about this book being difficult to read or follow. Each chapter is composed so that any reader can follow along. He rarely uses technical jargons that would need to be looked up in a dictionary. The tragedy, although this can hardly be the author's fault, is the many repeated details and accounts of tragic events happening to innocent citizens in the cities and in the countryside throughout what would seem to be every single chapter.
"Suicide was not easily accomplished...But nothing bred ingenuity quite like despair".
Prior to reading China history, I studied Germany and the Nazi's during World War II. It would be inaccurate of me to say which event is worst, especially since they happened relatively one after the other. However, it's sad to say that although the years covered in The Tragedy of Liberation was tragic enough already, we're just at the beginning. The Great Famine, which is what originally got me interested in these events, along with The Cultural Revolution still awaits.
Top reviews from other countries
Also a painful minded for those survivors and their families who survived during the social movements and the land reform.









