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Beyond Suffering: Recounting War Modern China
Indigo
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Beyond Suffering: Recounting War Modern China
By None
Current price: $95.00


By None
Beyond Suffering: Recounting War Modern China
Current price: $95.00
Loading Inventory...
Size: Hardcover
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Indigo
China was afflicted by a brutal succession of conflicts through much
of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Yet there has never been
clear understanding of how wartime suffering has defined the nation and
shaped its people.
In Beyond Suffering, a distinguished group of historians of
modern China look beyond the geopolitical aspects of war to explore its
social, institutional, and cultural dimensions. The chapters in Part 1,
“Society at War,” reveal how militarization and war can
both structure and destabilize society, while those in Part 2,
“Institutional Engagement,” show how institutions and the
people they represent can become pawns in larger power struggles.
Lastly, Part 3, “Memory and Representation,” examines the
various media, monuments, and social controls by which war has been
memorialized.
Based on fragmented accounts of poorly understood incidents,
Beyond Suffering pieces together a fuller picture of the
multiple fronts on which wars in modern China have been fought,
experienced, and remembered.
China was afflicted by a brutal succession of conflicts through much
of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Yet there has never been
clear understanding of how wartime suffering has defined the nation and
shaped its people.
In Beyond Suffering, a distinguished group of historians of
modern China look beyond the geopolitical aspects of war to explore its
social, institutional, and cultural dimensions. The chapters in Part 1,
“Society at War,” reveal how militarization and war can
both structure and destabilize society, while those in Part 2,
“Institutional Engagement,” show how institutions and the
people they represent can become pawns in larger power struggles.
Lastly, Part 3, “Memory and Representation,” examines the
various media, monuments, and social controls by which war has been
memorialized.
Based on fragmented accounts of poorly understood incidents,
Beyond Suffering pieces together a fuller picture of the
multiple fronts on which wars in modern China have been fought,
experienced, and remembered.



















