This book examines the emergence of Communist power in China
during the interwar period, focusing especially on the role of the
Soviet Union and the 1927 Nanchang Uprising. It describes the
history behind the alliance between the Chinese Communists and
Nationalists, the impact of the USSR's military and political
advisers, and the success of the Northern Expedition that resulted
in the April 1927 purge of the Communists from the Nationalist
Party. It explores the debates between leading communists in
Moscow, notably Stalin - who thought that China was ready in 1927
for an urban-based Communist revolution, similar to what had
happened in Russia ten years before - and Trotsky who opposed it.
It goes on examine the seizure of power in Nanchang by the
Communists, the establishment of China's first short-lived soviet
republic, and the reasons why the soviet soon collapsed. It
explains the consequences of the rising, including the adoption by
the Communists of guerilla warfare, the foundation of China's
second soviet, and after moving to northwest China during the
1930s, the rise of Communist power throughout all of mainland China
which culminated in the establishment of the People's Republic of
China in 1949. The book stresses the importance of the mythology
that evolved around the Nanchang Uprising: since criticism of the
Nanchang Uprising would open themselves up to accusations that they
were Trotskyites, the Chinese Communists created the myth that the
Nanchang Uprising was a success, and later dated the origins of the
People's Liberation Army to this event.
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