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Showing 166 items in the collection

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  • Theme

    • Oral and Personal Accounts (161)
    • History of the Chinese Communist Party (139)
    • Civil Society (92)
    • History of Unofficial Thought (87)
    • The Cultural Revolution (66)
    • The Great Leap Forward/The Great Famine (58)
    • Intellectuals (55)
    • Communist Party Political System (47)
    • Freedom of Speech and Press (46)
    • Famine (45)
    • Advocacy of Democratic Rights (45)
    • The Anti-Rightist Campaign (44)
    • Mao Zedong (39)
    • 1989 Tiananmen Protests and Suppression (37)
    • Women and Feminism (31)
    • Farmers' Rights and Rural Issues (25)
    • Justice and Human Rights (25)
    • Early Communist Party (24)
    • Intra-Party Conflict and Purges (19)
    • Public Health (18)
    • Everyday Life in China (18)
    • COVID-19 (11)
    • Economic System and Reform (11)
    • Faith-Based Crackdown and Persecution (9)
    • Ethnic Minorities (8)
    • Labor (8)
    • Religion and Faith (7)
    • Gender and Sexuality (6)
    • Chinese Petitioning System (5)
    • Natural Disasters (5)
    • Land Reform (1947-1953) (4)
    • White Paper Movement (4)
    • Education (4)
    • Disability (3)
    • Liberalism (2)
    • The Three Gorges Dam Project (2)
    • Demolition and Displacement (1)
    • Environment (1)

  • Type

    • Book (162)
    • Film and Video (103)
    • Article (39)
    • Official Documents (6)
    • Periodicals (5)
    • Exhibits (1)
    • 图书 (1)

  • Creator

    • Tiger Temple (61)
    • Ai Xiaoming (20)
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  • Era

    • Reform Era (1978-2012) (155)
    • Maoist Era (1949-1978) (129)
    • The Cultural Revolution Period (1966-1976) (67)
    • The Great Leap Forward/Great Famine Period (1958-1962) (52)
    • The Anti-Rightist Campaign Period (1957-1958) (47)
    • Xi Jinping Era (2013 —) (31)
    • Republic of China Period (1912-1949) (29)
    • Yan’an Period (1935-1948) (11)
    • The Second Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945) (8)
    • Chinese Soviet Republic Period/ (1928-1937) (7)
    • The First Kuomintang-Communist Civil War (1927-1937) (5)
    • The Second Kuomintang-Communist Civil War (1945-1949) (5)

166 items

Film and Video

Working Toward a Civil Society (Episode 44): Liu Qian

How can China build a true civil society? Independent director Tiger Temple has conducted a series of interviews with scholars and civil society participants since 2010.
Film and Video

Working toward a Civil Society (Episode 45): He Weifang

How can China build a true civil society? Since 2010, independent director Tiger Temple has conducted a series of interviews with scholars and civil society participants.
Film and Video

Working toward a Civil Society (Episode 46): Guo Xianliang

How can China build a true civil society? Since 2010, independent director Tiger Temple has conducted a series of interviews with scholars and civil society participants.
Film and Video

Working toward a Civil Society (Episode 47): Liang Wendao

How can China build a true civil society? Since 2010, independent director Tiger Temple has conducted a series of interviews with scholars and civil society participants.
Film and Video

Working toward a Civil Society (Episode 48): Chen Hongguo

How can China build a true civil society? Since 2010, independent director Tiger Temple has conducted a series of interviews with scholars and civil society participants.
Film and Video

Working toward a Civil Society (Episode 49): Ding Jiaxi

ow can China build a true civil society? Since 2010, independent director Tiger Temple has conducted a series of interviews with scholars and civil society participants.
Film and Video

Working toward a Civil Society (Episode 5): Cui Weiping

The Xi’an-based videographer Zhang Shihe, or Tiger Temple, has been a fixture on the independent Chinese history scene for more than twenty years. In 2010, he began a thirty-part series of short interviews with leading Chinese thinkers called “Working Toward Civil Society,” in which he explores how China can build a true civil society. Some of those interviewed have now been silenced, passed away, or moved abroad, making the series itself a work of history. In this episode, Zhang interviews one of China’s most thoughtful public thinkers, Cui Weiping. Cui is a professor at the Beijing Film Academy, and translator of Havel into Chinese. She was a signer of Charter 08, and friend of the late Nobel Peace Prize laureate Liu Xiaobo. Although the interview is only 8 minutes long, Cui touches on some of the key problems that continue to plague China: how to break free of overwhelming government control of civic life? Note to English speakers: this interview only has Chinese subtitles. The CUA is working to add English subtitles to all of our video offerings so check back in a few months.
Film and Video

Working toward a Civil Society (Episode 50): Zhang Baocheng

How can China build a true civil society? Since 2010, independent director Tiger Temple has conducted a series of interviews with scholars and civil society participants.
Film and Video

Working toward a Civil Society (Episode 51): Hu Shigen

How can China build a true civil society? Since 2010, independent director Tiger Temple has conducted a series of interviews with scholars and civil society participants.
Film and Video

Working toward a Civil Society (Episode 52): Qu Mingxue

How can China build a true civil society? Since 2010, independent director Tiger Temple has conducted a series of interviews with scholars and civil society participants.
Film and Video

Working toward a Civil Society (Episode 53): Liang Xiaoyan

How can China build a true civil society? Since 2010, independent director Tiger Temple has conducted a series of interviews with scholars and civil society participants.
Film and Video

Working Toward a Civil Society (Episode 54): Pu Zhiqiang

How can China build a true civil society? Independent director Tiger Temple has conducted a series of interviews with scholars and civil society participants since 2010.
Film and Video

Working toward a Civil Society (Episode 55): Zheng Baohe

How can China build a true civil society? Since 2010, independent director Tiger Temple has conducted a series of interviews with scholars and civil society participants.
Film and Video

Working toward a Civil Society (Episode 6): He Fang

How can China build a real civil society? Since 2010, independent director Tiger Temple sat for a series of interviews with scholars and civil society actors.
Film and Video

Working toward a Civil Society (Episode 7): Guo Yuhua

How can China build a real civil society? Since 2010, independent director Tiger Temple sat for a series of interviews with scholars and civil society actors.
Film and Video

Working toward a Civil Society (Episode 8): Xu Youyu

How can China build a true civil society? Since 2010, independent director Tiger Temple has conducted a series of interviews with scholars and civil society participants.
Film and Video

Working toward a Civil Society (Episode 9): Zhang Hui

How can China build a true civil society? Since 2010, independent director Tiger Temple has conducted a series of interviews with scholars and civil society participants.
Film and Video

Xu Zhiyong

Chinese human rights activist Dr. Xu Zhiyong, twice imprisoned for his longstanding advocacy of civil society in China, was sentenced to 14 years in prison by the Chinese government in April 2023. The documentary by independent director Lao Hu Miao was filmed over a four-year period, beginning with the seizure of the Public League Legal Research Center, which Xu Zhiyong helped found in 2009, and ending with Xu's first prison sentence in 2014.
Book

Yan'an Rectification

The Rectification Movement took place in Yan'an, North Shaanxi Province, in the 1940s. This book, written by scholars within the Chinese official system, attempts to chronicle the ins and outs of the Rectification Movement in Yan'an and the base areas, analyzing its causes and the logical development of its results. It is rich in information that is only found here. This book was published by Zhejiang People's Publishing House in 1999.
Book

Yangtze Yangtze

In March 1989, the book Yangtze Yangtze was published by the Guizhou People's Publishing House just as the Tiananmen student protests were about to begin in Beijing. The book fed into this intellectual ferment, challenging the technocratic reasons for the Three Gorges Dam, which eventually would dam the Yangtze River in the name of flood control and electrical power generation. The book was edited by the journalist Dai Qing, the daughter of a well-known Communist Party activist and leader. The book challenged the project's decision-making process, with a broad array of scientists, journalists, and intellectuals arguing that it was not democratic and did not take into account all viewpoints. It was widely read in China and translated into foreign languages. After the Tiananmen protests were violently suppressed, Dai Qing was arrested and imprisoned for ten months in Qincheng Prison as an organizer of the uprising. Yangtze Yangtze was criticized  as “promoting bourgeois liberalization, opposing the Four Fundamental Principles (of party control), and creating public opinion for turmoil and riots.” The book was taken off the shelves and destroyed, with some copies  burned. It became the first banned book resulting from the decision-making process of the Three Gorges Project. The book is banned in China. The English-language edition can be read online at Probe International: https://journal.probeinternational.org/three-gorges-probe/yangtze-yangtze/.
Displaying results 141–160 of 166
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