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This was the motto of Chang Kuo-sin, and the ideal which he inspired generations of students of communication to follow. He proved his own dedication to this when, in 1949, he found himself in Nanking, the former nationalist capital, under the rule of the newly victorious communists. For eight months he lived and attempted to work in the midst of these historical changes. He managed to smuggle his detailed notes out to share with the world at a time when almost no reports of the new regime were being published. To mark the centenary of his birth, Hong Kong Baptist University’s School of Communication has republished this important work by one of its most distinguished professors.
PART ONE Communists Rule in Nanking After One Month of Trial (April 23 – May 23, 1949) 1. Communist Government 2. Popular Reactions 3. Communist Press 4. The Communist Army 5. Nationalist Retreat from Nanking 6. Communists and Foreign Recognition PART TWO Communist Rule in China After Eight Months of Trial (April – December 1949) 1. Communist Totalitarianism 2. Communist Efforts to Disguise Totalitarianism 3. Democratic Spirit Within the Communist Party 4. The Threat of Diversionism Inside the Communist Party 5. Communist “Lean to One Side” Principle 6. The Merits and Demerits of the Communist Government 7. Disillusionment and Discontent in Communist China 8. Causes of Disillusionment and Discontent 9. Disillusionment and Discontent Among Workers 10. Disillusion and Discontent Among Farmers 11. Problems Facing the Communists – Currency 12. Problems Facing the Communists – Agriculture and the Industry 13. Problems Facing the Communists – Famine 14. Problems Facing the Communists – How to Sell Soviet Russia to the Chinese People 15. Soviet Help in the Sovietisation of China 16. Soviet Russians and Manchuria 17. Moslem Opposition to Communist Rule 18. Foreigners in Communist China 19. “Democratic Personages” in Peking 20. Will the Communists Turn Titoists in the Future? 21. Farewell to Communist China
作者簡介 CHANG Kuo-sin CHANG Kuo Sin (1916–2006) worked as a translator, a reporter, a film-maker, an author, a professor and the head of the Communication Department of the Hong Kong Baptist College. He lived through some of the most turbulent times of the twentieth century and bore witness, with his characteristic devotion to the truth, to some of the defining events of our times.
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