ABSTRACT

It is the purpose of this work to provide an integrated analytical framework that will serve as a guide to further study of the vast and complex subject of Chinese Communist politics. The outpouring of materials from U.S., Soviet, Chinese Communist, and Chinese Nationalist sources in recent years has greatly enriched our fund of knowledge about China. For the historian of Chinese politics the new data have provided answers to hitherto unresolved problems and raised questions about seemingly settled issues. Although it is now possible to piece together the main outlines of the struggle for power in China, obviously no single volume can presume to encompass all aspects of the story.

part I|124 pages

The Origin and Development of Chinese Communism, 1917-1941

chapter II|25 pages

The "Soviet" Experiment, 1927-1931

chapter III|27 pages

Defeat in Kiangsi, 1931-1934

chapter V|25 pages

The Road to War, 1937-1941

part II|100 pages

The American Experience in China, 1941-1949

part III|114 pages

The Sino-Soviet Relationship, 1949-1968

chapter XI|32 pages

The Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution

I: The Mounting Crisis, 1965-1967

chapter XII|29 pages

The Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution

II: Protracted Crisis, 1967-1968

part IV|101 pages

The Evolution of U.S.-China Relations, 1969-1980

chapter XIII|20 pages

China in a Tri-Polar World, 1969-1973

chapter XIV|25 pages

The End of the Maoist Era, 1973-1976

chapter XV|25 pages

The Struggle for Succession, 1976-1978