which reviews Steve MacKinnon’s new book, Wuhan, 1938:
War, Refugees, and the Making of Modern China (University of California Press,
2008). Steve is a friend, but I think anyone would find this book not only a
good read but also quite informative on a neglected turning point in modern
China. It’s also a good introduction to the work in military history which has
quietly transformed our understandings of China before 1949.
Steve makes
the point that in this period the United Front worked and that the staggering
losses were part of a heroic and in some ways quite successful military
strategy. Chiang Kai-shek presided over an energetic coalition and had
widespread support. The move upriver to Chongqing
was heroic in much the same way as the Long March. It’s a page turning story,
though quite horrifying in the descriptions of refugee life and battlefield
realities. There’s also a section of photographs which do not merely illustrate
but actually develop the themes of the text.
Asia Media, by the way, is
run out of the UCLA Asia Institute, and is one of the useful sites for keeping
up with breaking news in Asia. Every day they post links to dozens of stories in
newspapers around Asia, but also the occasional commentary or review such as
mine.
View Chongqing scenery online:http://city.chinaassistor.com/chongqing



