Race the Rising Sun
A Chinese University's Exodus during the Second World War
By (author) Chiao-Min Hsieh, Jean Kan Hsieh
Publication date:
16 May 2009Length of book:
214 pagesPublisher
Hamilton BooksDimensions:
231x154mm6x9"
ISBN-13: 9780761841487
This book is about Zhejiang University, one of the oldest and most prestigious universities in China, which was forced to evacuate from the Hangzhou when the Japanese arrived in 1937 and began torturing civilians, raping women, bombing towns, burning farms, and destroying factories, homes, schools, and libraries. The faculty, staff, and students fled to a succession of towns where they sought refuge from the war and set up temporary classrooms to continue with their educational mission.
This exodus lasted eight years and spanned over a thousand miles. They faced constant fear and worry due to malnutrition, disease, abject poverty, and enemy air strikes. But with the resilience and spirit of its faculty and students, the University survived to help revitalize a devastated nation.
This exodus lasted eight years and spanned over a thousand miles. They faced constant fear and worry due to malnutrition, disease, abject poverty, and enemy air strikes. But with the resilience and spirit of its faculty and students, the University survived to help revitalize a devastated nation.
This book offers a fine specimen of non-fiction that runs the gamut: it is very appealing and readable as a personal memoir, it is enthralling and memorable as a historical tract, and it is intriguing and informative as an institutional archival piece. The stage of history is here fitted out with life-or-death moments, war-torn landscapes and characters with unique, touching and believable human traits...