TY - BOOK AU - Fitzgerald,John TI - Awakening China: politics, culture, and class in the Nationalist Revolution SN - 0804726590 AV - DS776.6 .F58 1996 U1 - 951.04 20 PY - 1996/// CY - Stanford, Calif. PB - Stanford University Press KW - Nationalism KW - China KW - History KW - 20th century KW - Intellectuals KW - 1912-1928 KW - 1928-1937 N1 - Includes bibliographical references (pages 403-438) and index; Introduction: awakening the beast --; 1; Awakening and being awakened --; 2; One world, one China: from ethical awakening to national emancipation --; 3; One china, one nation: the unequal treatise of ethnography --; 4; One nation, one state: "Feudalism" and social revolution --; 5; One state, one party: liberal politics and the party-state --; 6; One party, one voice: the nationalist propaganda bureau --; 7; Awakening inc.: government, party and army propaganda institutions --; Conclusion: representing class and nation --; Notes --; Bibliography --; Index N2 - "This innovative work is the first to approach the awakening of China as an historical problem in its own right, and to locate this problem within the broader history of the rise of modern China. It analyses the link between the awakening of China as an historical narrative and the awakening of the Chinese people as a political technique for building a sovereign and independent state. In sum, it asks what we mean when we say that China 'woke up' in this century. Fiction and fashion, architecture and autobiography, take their places alongside politics and history to show how the idea of a national awakening made room for Nationalist politics in personal culture and helped to conscript personal culture to the service of the revolutionary state. The book focuses on the Nationalist movement in south China, highlighting the role of Sun Yat-sen as director of awakenings in the Nationalist Revolution and the place of Mao Zedong as his successor."--Publisher description ER -