Through the individual characteristics of China's political
leaders, a nation-building process began. Chinese leaders fell into
two categories of reformers: conservative and liberal. Conservative
reformers saw a corruption of the moral order of society that
needed to be eliminated in order to restore the country's moral
integrity, while liberal reformers attempted to embrace the flaws
and lead China toward Socialism. One hundred Chinese leaders--from
the Opium War to 2001--are profiled in this comprehensive
biographical dictionary.
This book provides the most up-to-date coverage of modern
Chinese political leadership during the Imperial, Republican, and
Communist periods. Political leaders throughout each period had a
common desire for reform within the country while maintaining
China's political and cultural legacy. Leung invokes the uniqueness
of those leaders in their struggle for personal gain and national
improvement as they fought to preserve traditional values. Written
by 30 international scholars and experts in the field using both
Western and Chinese sources, this is the most authoritative
dictionary on the subject.
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