126 Avsnitt

  1. The Early Jinggangshan Revolutionary Movement

    Publicerades: 2021-07-01
  2. Mao’s Bandit Comrades: Wang Zuo and Yuan Wencai

    Publicerades: 2021-06-24
  3. Bandits of the Jinggangshan

    Publicerades: 2021-06-17
  4. Background on Society and Economy in the Jinggang Mountains

    Publicerades: 2021-06-10
  5. Entering the Jinggangshan: The Sanwan Reorganization of the People’s Army

    Publicerades: 2021-06-03
  6. The Autumn Harvest Uprising in Hunan

    Publicerades: 2021-05-27
  7. Planning the Autumn Harvest Uprising in Hunan

    Publicerades: 2021-05-21
  8. The Autumn Harvest Uprising in Hubei

    Publicerades: 2021-05-15
  9. The “Tender-Hearted Communist:” Qu Qiubai

    Publicerades: 2021-05-08
  10. Army or Militia? Mao and the Politburo Diverge on Military Policy for the Autumn Harvest Uprising

    Publicerades: 2021-04-24
  11. The Decisive Turn to Overthrowing the Guomindang: The 7 August 1927 Emergency Conference

    Publicerades: 2021-04-17
  12. The Nanchang Uprising (August 1, 1927)

    Publicerades: 2021-02-17
  13. The End of the United Front (June to July 1927)

    Publicerades: 2021-02-08
  14. “Like Taking a Bath in a Toilet” (May and June 1927)

    Publicerades: 2021-01-29
  15. Mao Tries to Legislate a Peasant Revolution: The Wuhan Land Commission (April to May 1927)

    Publicerades: 2021-01-23
  16. “An Example of the Chinese Tenant-Peasant’s Life”

    Publicerades: 2021-01-23
  17. The Fifth Party Congress and the ‘Better Fewer but Better’ Approach to Summing up a Massacre

    Publicerades: 2021-01-18
  18. Rivers of Blood in the Streets of Shanghai: The Massacre of the Communists by the Guomindang Right

    Publicerades: 2021-01-07
  19. The Third Armed Uprising in Shanghai

    Publicerades: 2020-12-17
  20. The Split in the Guomindang: The Left Government in Wuhan and the Military Headquarters in Nanchang Develop Irreconcilable Differences (January to March 1927)

    Publicerades: 2020-12-03

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In this podcast, Matthew Rothwell, author of Transpacific Revolutionaries: The Chinese Revolution in Latin America, explores the global history of ideas related to rebellion and revolution. The main focus of this podcast for the near future will be on the history of the Chinese Revolution, going all the way back to its roots in the initial Chinese reactions to British imperialism during the Opium War of 1839-1842, and then following the development of the revolution and many of the ideas that were products of the revolution through to their transnational diffusion in the late 20th century.

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