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Tibetan Revolutionary
Tibetan Revolutionary
★★★★★
★★★★★
Regular price
€29.99
20th century tibetan history
A01=Dawei Sherap
A01=Melvyn C. Goldstein
A01=William R Siebenschuh
asian history
Author_Dawei Sherap
Author_Melvyn C. Goldstein
Author_William R Siebenschuh
autobiography
bapa phuntsok wangyal
Category=DNBH
Category=NHF
chinese communist party
communism
dalai lama
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
government and governing
guerrilla uprising
history
mao zedong
nationalist chinese government
phuntsok wangyal
phuntsok wangyal goranangpa
phunwang
political ideology
politics
qincheng
republic of china
revolution
revolutionary
sino tibetan relations
solitary confinement
tibet
tibetan communist party
tibetan politician
Product details
- ISBN 9780520249929
- Weight: 544g
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 04 Sep 2006
- Publisher: University of California Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
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This is the as-told-to political autobiography of Phuntso Wangye (Phunwang), one of the most important Tibetan revolutionary figures of the twentieth century. Phunwang began his activism in school, where he founded a secret Tibetan Communist Party. He was expelled in 1940, and for the next nine years he worked to organize a guerrilla uprising against the Chinese who controlled his homeland. In 1949, he merged his Tibetan Communist Party with Mao's Chinese Communist Party. He played an important role in the party's administrative organization in Lhasa and was the translator for the young Dalai Lama during his famous 1954-55 meetings with Mao Zedong. In the 1950s, Phunwang was the highest-ranking Tibetan official within the Communist Party in Tibet. Though he was fluent in Chinese, comfortable with Chinese culture, and devoted to socialism and the Communist Party, Phunwang's deep commitment to the welfare of Tibetans made him suspect to powerful Han colleagues. In 1958 he was secretly detained; three years later, he was imprisoned in solitary confinement in Beijing's equivalent of the Bastille for the next eighteen years.
Informed by vivid firsthand accounts of the relations between the Dalai Lama, the Nationalist Chinese government, and the People's Republic of China, this absorbing chronicle illuminates one of the world's most tragic and dangerous ethnic conflicts at the same time that it relates the fascinating details of a stormy life spent in the quest for a new Tibet.
Melvyn C. Goldstein is John Reynolds Harkness Professor in Anthropology and Codirector of the Center for Research on Tibet at Case Western Reserve University. Dawei Sherap is a Tibetan-born intellectual living and working in China. He has written extensively on Phunwang. William R. Siebenschuh is Chair of the English Department at Case Western Reserve University.
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