"Mao: The Unknown Story" - читать интересную книгу автора (Chang Jung, Halliday Jon)
JUNG CHANG, JON HALLIDAY MAO: THE UNKNOWN STORYCONTENTS List of Illustrations List of Maps List of Abbreviations in Text Note about Spelling in Text PART ONE 1 On the Cusp from Ancient to Modern (1893–1911; age 1–17) 2 Becoming a Communist (1911–20; age 17–26) 3 Lukewarm Believer (1920–25; age 26–31) 4 Rise and Demise in the Nationalist Party (1925–27; age 31–33) PART TWO 5 Hijacking a Red Force and Taking Over Bandit Land (1927–28; age 33–34) 6 Subjugating the Red Army Supremo (1928–30; age 34–36) 7 Takeover Leads to Death of Second Wife (1927–30; age 33–36) 8 Bloody Purge Paves the Way for “Chairman Mao” (1929–31; age 35–37) 9 Mao and the First Red State (1931–34; age 37–40) 10 Troublemaker to Figurehead (1931–34; age 37–40) 11 How Mao Got onto the Long March (1933–34; age 39–40) 12 Long March I: Chiang Lets the Reds Go (1934; age 40) 13 Long March II: The Power behind the Throne (1934–35; age 40–41) 14 Long March III: Monopolizing the Moscow Connection (1935; age 41) PART THREE 15 The Timely Death of Mao’s Host (1935–36; age 41–42) 16 Chiang Kai-shek Kidnapped (1935–36; age 41–42) 17 A National Player (1936; age 42–43) 18 New Image, New Life and New Wife (1937–38; age 43–44) 19 Red Mole Triggers China — Japan War (1937–38; age 43–44) 20 Fight Rivals and Chiang — Not Japan (1937–40; age 43–46) 21 Most Desired Scenario: Stalin Carves up China with Japan (1939–40; age 45–46) 22 Death Trap for His Own Men (1940–41; age 46–47) 23 Building a Power Base through Terror (1941–45; age 47–51) 24 Uncowed Opponent Poisoned (1941–45; age 47–51) 25 Supreme Party Leader at Last (1942–45; age 48–51) PART FOUR 26 “Revolutionary Opium War” (1937–45; age 43–51) 27 The Russians Are Coming! (1945–46; age 51–52) 28 Saved by Washington (1944–47; age 50–53) 29 Moles, Betrayals and Poor Leadership Doom Chiang (1945–49; age 51–55) 3 °China Conquered (1946–49; age 52–55) 31 Totalitarian State, Extravagant Lifestyle (1949–53; age 55–59) PART FIVE 32 Rivalry with Stalin (1947–49; age 53–55) 33 Two Tyrants Wrestle (1949–50; age 55–56) 34 Why Mao and Stalin Started the Korean War (1949–50; age 55–56) 35 Mao Milks the Korean War (1950–53; age 56–59) 36 Launching the Secret Superpower Program (1953–54; age 59–60) 37 War on Peasants (1953–56; age 59–62) 38 Undermining Khrushchev (1956–59; age 62–65) 39 Killing the “Hundred Flowers” (1957–58; age 63–64) 40 The Great Leap: “Half of China May Well Have to Die” (1958–61; age 64–67) 41 Defense Minister Peng’s Lonely Battle (1958–59; age 64–65) 42 The Tibetans Rebel (1950–61; age 56–67) 43 Maoism Goes Global (1959–64; age 65–70) 44 Ambushed by the President (1961–62; age 67–68) 45 The Bomb (1962–64; age 68–70) 46 A Time of Uncertainty and Setbacks (1962–65; age 68–71) PART SIX 47 A Horse-trade Secures the Cultural Revolution (1965–66; age 71–72) 48 The Great Purge (1966–67; age 72–73) 49 Unsweet Revenge (1966–74; age 72–80) 50 The Chairman’s New Outfit (1967–70; age 73–76) 51 A War Scare (1969–71; age 75–77) 52 Falling Out with Lin Biao (1970–71; age 76–77) 53 Maoism Falls Flat on the World Stage (1966–70; age 72–76) 54 Nixon: The Red-baiter Baited (1970–73; age 76–79) 55 The Boss Denies Chou Cancer Treatment (1972–74; age 78–80) 56 Mme Mao in the Cultural Revolution (1966–75; age 72–81) 57 Enfeebled Mao Hedges His Bets (1973–76; age 79–82) 58 Last Days (1974–76; age 80–82) Epilogue Acknowledgments List of Interviewees Archives Consulted Notes Bibliography of Chinese-language Sources Bibliography of Non-Chinese-language Sources Photo Insert |
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