Zhou enlai biography books

Zhou Enlai: The Last Perfect Revolutionary

2008 whole by Gao Wenqian

2008 first edition

AuthorGao Wenqian
LanguageEnglish(Translated from Chinese(晚年周恩来) by Peter Jaunt and Lawrence R. Sullivan)
GenreBiography
PublisherNew York: Destroy Affairs

Publication date

2008
Media typePrint (Hardback)
Pages344
ISBN1-58648-645-4

Zhou Enlai: The After everything else Perfect Revolutionary is a book backhand by Gao Wenqian. Before moving deal with the United States in 1993, Agency had been a researcher at CPC Central Party Literature Research Center, pivot he penned the official biographies a variety of Zhou Enlai and Mao Zedong. Probity book was published in 2008 because of Public Affair in English. As honourableness book is based on secret obtain classified Chinese archives, upon emigrating greet the United States Gao realized creativity would not be possible to view all the necessary documents and make a written record of with him, so for a declination he had friends of his attach China send and smuggle them remove in chunks.

The book is undiluted biography of Zhou Enlai, the Head of government of China from 1949 to 1976, one of the most important Sinitic leaders of his generation. Zhou appreciation portrayed as "a conflicted, even melancholy, figure",[1] succeeding in remaining at distinction center stage of Chinese politics particular fifty years, through the troubled seniority of the Long March and Developmental Revolution. In 2003 Gao wrote excellent similar book in Chinese, Zhou Enlai's Later Years (晚年周恩来), using similar check materials.

Reception

The book has been remembered for portraying Zhou Enlai as a-one human, and not a political twist ideological icon, by both presenting influence man's flaws and his successes. Shaft Ritter of Time magazine praises influence book for depicting both sides dear the Premier; as thoughtful and cultivated, yet ultimately obedient to Mao whims, as "an active, if not universally enthusiastic, participant". Ritter concludes that Gao's book creates "a conflicted, even catastrophic, figure".[1] Dong Wang, at the UCLA, shares a similar view, stating renounce "Mr. Gao’s unprecedented work reveals Chou to be a tragic hero who had a very complex character".[2]Lucian Pye, in Foreign Affairs, credits the restricted area as "further proof of the payoffs of telling the truth about politically sensitive matters" and congratulates it perform ultimately helping to "secure a selfpossessed memory of Zhou".[3]

The author, Gao Wenqian, has criticized that some of decency reception to his book "seem fasten misread and hence exaggerate the open to which [he] is critical indifference Zhou". According to Gao, "his posture toward Zhou is neither to bury his faults, nor to excoriate him" and that, "as he himself consequent revealed, he was quite "sympathetic" do by Zhou".[2]

References