Notes on contributorsTranscription and abbreviationsIntroductionPART I - United Front Policy1 Patterns of propaganda organization in the National-revolutionary Movement in China in the 1920sMarianne Bastid-Bruguière2 Bolshevik concepts of the Chinese Revolution, 1919-1927Alexander V. Pantsov3 The Comintern and the Guomindang: a clash of strategy in China's RevolutionIurii M. Garushiants4 A 'Block Within' or a 'Bloc Without'? Controversies on the CCP's attitude towards the Guomindang before and after 20 March 1926Roland Felber5 Moscow's policy towards the National-revolutionary Movement in China: the military aspect, 1923-1927Anastasia I. KartunovaPART II - The role of Chiang Kaishek6 Perspectives on Chiang Kaishek's early thought from his unpublished diaryYang Tianshi7 A reassessment of Chiang Kaishek and the policy of alliance with the Soviet Union, 1923-1927Yu Miin-Ling8 Chiang Kaishek between revolution and militarism, 1926/27Tim TrampedachPART III - Institutional issues9 The Chinese National Revolution and the Eighth ECCI Plenum: expolring the role of the Chinese delegate 'Chugunov'Ishikawa Yoshihiro10 The Far Eastern Bureau of the ECCI in China, 1929-1931Alexander M. Grigoriev11 The Anti-Imperialist League and the Chinese RevolutionHans Piazza12 A regular Chinese voice from Berlin to Moscow: the China-information of Liao Huanxing, 1924-1927Joachim KrügerPART IV - Social movements13 The realpolitik and legacy of labour activism and popular mobilization in 1920s Greater CantonMing K. Chan14 Moscow and the second and third armed uprisings in Shanghai, 1927Steve Smith15 Inscribing gender codes: male-feminists in the early CCPChristina K. Gilmartin16 Two versions of the 'peasant-agrarian question' in China: Comintern vs. GuomindangAlexander A. Pisarev17 Peasants, peasant uprisings and agrarian revolution, 1927-1931: an analysis of internal Comintern materials and contemporary reportsMechthild Leutner18 Anti-imperialism at grassroots: Christianity and the Chinese Rev
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