Academic literature on the topic 'Wang Jingwei'

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Journal articles on the topic "Wang Jingwei"

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Taylor, Jeremy E. "Republican Personality Cults in Wartime China: Contradistinction and Collaboration." Comparative Studies in Society and History 57, no. 3 (June 25, 2015): 665–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0010417515000249.

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AbstractThis paper explores the development of the Wang Jingwei personality cult during the Japanese occupation of China (1937–1945). It examines how the collaborationist Chinese state led by Wang sought to distinguish its figurehead from the person he had replaced, Nationalist leader Chiang Kai-shek. Drawing on visual, archival, and published sources, it traces the development of the Wang cult from the early years of the war, and argues that the unusual context in which the cult evolved ultimately undermined its coherence. The case of Wang Jingwei illustrates how the Chinese case more broadly can enhance our understandings of personality cults that develop under occupation. To this end, I compare the Wang regime with various European “collaborationist” governments that sought to promote their leaders in similar ways.
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Martin, Brian G. "‘In My Heart I Opposed Opium’: Opium and the Politics of the Wang Jingwei Government, 1940–45." European Journal of East Asian Studies 2, no. 2 (March 24, 2003): 365–410. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15700615-00202009.

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The Wang Jingwei government has been reviled as the Chinese collaborationist regime par excellence, and one of the major indictments against it was its involvement with the alleged Japanese ‘narcotisation policy’. The politics of collaboration, however, were complex, and are not fully captured by a one-dimensional portrayal of the leading collaborators as ‘national traitors’. The Wang Jingwei government was, indeed, complicit in facilitating the Japanese-sponsored opium monopoly during its early years, although it played only a marginal role in running this monopoly. At the same time, as this article seeks to demonstrate, the regime did attempt to continue implementing the pre-war Nationalist government’s opium suppression programme. Its motives were mixed: it wanted to bolster its legitimacy by portraying itself as the successor regime to the pre-war Nationalist government, and, also like that government, it sought to bolster its parlous finances by recourse to an opium tax. Political developments in Japan in 1943 enabled the Wang Jingwei government to gain control of the opium monopoly, and from 1944 until its demise it made a genuine attempt to implement a policy of opium suppression. This policy achieved some success. The government, however, never resolved the ambiguity between the political aims and the financial needs that drove its policy; nor did it effectively overcome the demoralisation produced by years of open trafficking; and it was never able to curb the Japanese military’s narcotic operations.
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Taylor, Jeremy E. "FROM TRAITOR TO MARTYR: DRAWING LESSONS FROM THE DEATH AND BURIAL OF WANG JINGWEI, 1944." Journal of Chinese History 3, no. 1 (March 25, 2018): 137–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/jch.2017.43.

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AbstractBased on recently reopened files and publications in Nanjing, as well as published and newsreel accounts from the 1940s, this paper represents the first scholarly analysis of the rituals surrounding the death and burial of Wang Jingwei in Japanese-occupied China. Rather than locating this analysis purely in the literature on the history of the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–45), however, this paper asks what Wang Jingwei's Re-organized National Government might tell us about personality cults in the political culture of modern China. While Wang's burial drew heavily on the precedent of Sun Yat-sen's funerals of the 1920s, it also presaged later spectacles of public mourning and posthumous commemoration, such as Chiang Kai-shek's funeral in 1975 in Taipei. In focusing on this one specific event in the life of a “puppet government,” this paper hopes to reignite scholarly interest in the study of “dead leaders” and their posthumous lives in modern Chinese history more generally.
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Ke-Wen, Wang. "Sun Yatsen, Wang Jingwei, and the Guangzhou Regimes, 1917-1925." Republican China 22, no. 1 (November 1996): 1–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/repc.1996.22.1.1.

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Wang, Ke-wen. "After the United Front: Wang Jingwei and the Left Guomindang." Republican China 18, no. 2 (January 1993): 1–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08932344.1993.11720220.

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Martin, Brian. "Shield of collaboration: The Wang Jingwei regime's security service, 1939–1945." Intelligence and National Security 16, no. 4 (December 2001): 89–148. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02684520412331306310.

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Yang, Zhiyi. "A Humanist in Wartime France: Wang Jingwei during the First World War." Poetica 49, no. 1-2 (June 27, 2019): 163–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.30965/25890530-04901006.

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Ke-wen, Wang. "Irreversible Verdict? Historical Assessments of Wang Jingwei in the People's Republic and Taiwan." Twentieth-Century China 28, no. 1 (2002): 57–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/tcc.2002.0008.

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Ke-wen, Wang. "Irreversible Verdict? Historical Assessments of Wang Jingwei in the People's Republic and Taiwan." Twentieth-Century China 28, no. 1 (November 2002): 57–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/tcc.2002.28.1.57.

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Feng Chongyi. "Betrayal or Loyalty? A Comment on Roy's Revealing a Secret Comintern Message to Wang Jingwei." China Report 24, no. 1 (February 1988): 99–108. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/000944558802400106.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Wang Jingwei"

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Serfass, David. "Le gouvernement collaborateur de Wang Jingwei : aspects de l’État d’occupation durant la guerre sino-japonaise, 1940-1945." Thesis, Paris, EHESS, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017EHES0133/document.

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Cette thèse se propose d’étudier le gouvernement collaborateur dirigé par Wang Jingwei (1940-1945) à la croisée de deux trajectoires : celle de l’État chinois moderne et celle de l’Empire japonais. Au-delà d’un approfondissement des connaissances sur l’occupation japonaise en Chine, mon travail ambitionne d’enrichir le champ des études sur l’État lui-même. Une telle approche ne va pas de soi, tant le caractère « fantoche » attribué à ce régime par l’historiographie chinoise l’a longtemps isolé du reste de la période et cantonné à une histoire des tenants idéologiques de la collaboration. Sans évacuer cet aspect, mon approche consiste à l’inscrire dans une étude politique et sociale du gouvernement et de l'administration, afin de saisir le fonctionnement réel de la machine étatique en zone occupée. Pour ce faire, je développe le concept d’État d’occupation, qui désigne l’ensemble formé par les organisations japonaises (institutions militaires et civiles) et chinoises (gouvernements collaborateurs locaux), établies afin d’administrer la Chine occupée. La construction de cet État, qui visa, à partir de 1940, à intégrer ces organisations derrière la façade du gouvernement de Wang Jingwei, fut détournée par des logiques de formation, nées des contradictions entre ses différents acteurs. Ce processus est examiné en adoptant des focales différentes. La première partie étudie la mise en place de l’État d’occupation du point de vue japonais, en montrant l’impact qu’eurent, l’un sur l’autre, centre et périphérie au sein de l’Empire nippon. Je reviens ensuite sur la genèse de cet État d’occupation, jusqu’à la formation du gouvernement de Wang Jingwei. La deuxième partie réduit la focale pour s’intéresser à l’organisation particulière de ce dernier, dont la spécificité, par rapport aux autres régimes collaborateurs, provenait de l’ambition qu’avait le groupe de Wang de restaurer le Gouvernement nationaliste légitime dans le cadre d’un « retour à la capitale ». La troisième partie, enfin, se penche sur le cas de la fonction publique en zone occupée, dont le cadre institutionnel et idéologique est mis en regard avec les conditions de vie des agents
This dissertation studies the collaboration government headed by Wang Jingwei (1940-1945) at the crossroads of two trajectories: those of China’s modern state and Japan’s Empire. More broadly, my work aims at enriching the field of state-building research. Such an approach may seem counter-intuitive, as this regime is still labelled a "puppet" by Chinese historiography, which has cast it aside from the rest of the period and confined it to an ideological history of collaboration. I consider it within the context of a political and social study of government and administration, which tries to grasp the real functioning of the state machine in the occupied zone. For this purpose, I develop the concept of occupation state, i.e. a larger apparatus than the sole collaboration regimes, which included Japanese military and civilian agencies as well as Chinese local governments. From 1940 on, the state-building process aimed at integrating these organizations behind the façade of the Wang Jingwei government. However, it was diverted by a formation process, which resulted from the contradictions between its different actors. I explore this process from three different angles. The first part studies the establishment of the occupation state from the Japanese point of view, showing the mutual impact of centre and periphery within the Japanese Empire. Then, it follows the genesis of the occupation state up to the establishment of the Wang Jingwei government. The second part focuses on the experience of the latter, whose specificity, compared to other pro-Japanese regimes, was the ambition of the Wang group to restore the legitimate nationalist government as part of a "return to the capital". Thirdly, I look at the administrative personnel’s institutional and ideological framework as well as their living conditions
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Chiu, Ming-wah. "Resistance, peace and war the Central China Daily News, the South China Daily News and the Wang Jingwei Clique during the Sino-Japanese War, 1937-1945 /." Click to view the E-thesis via HKUTO, 2005. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record/B3624689X.

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Chiu, Ming-wah, and 趙明華. "Resistance, peace and war: the Central China Daily News, the South China Daily News and the Wang Jingwei Cliqueduring the Sino-Japanese War, 1937-1945." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2005. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B3624689X.

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Wang, Jingwen [Verfasser], Reimund [Akademischer Betreuer] Gerhard, Dieter [Akademischer Betreuer] Neher, Reimund Gutachter] Gerhard, Dmitry [Gutachter] Rychkov, and Gerhard Martin [Gutachter] [Sessler. "Electret properties of polypropylene with surface chemical modification and crystalline reconstruction / Jingwen Wang ; Gutachter: Reimund Gerhard, Dmitry Rychkov, Gerhard Sessler ; Reimund Gerhard, Dieter Neher." Potsdam : Universität Potsdam, 2020. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-470271.

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Wang, Jingwen [Verfasser], Reimund [Akademischer Betreuer] Gerhard, Dieter [Akademischer Betreuer] Neher, Reimund [Gutachter] Gerhard, Dmitry [Gutachter] Rychkov, and Gerhard [Gutachter] Sessler. "Electret properties of polypropylene with surface chemical modification and crystalline reconstruction / Jingwen Wang ; Gutachter: Reimund Gerhard, Dmitry Rychkov, Gerhard Sessler ; Reimund Gerhard, Dieter Neher." Potsdam : Universität Potsdam, 2020. http://d-nb.info/1219662496/34.

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CAPISANI, LORENZO MARCO. "La Cina da impero a Stato nazionale: la definizione di uno spazio politico negli anni Venti." Doctoral thesis, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/10280/20588.

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La tesi si concentra sul Partito Nazionalista Cinese negli anni Venti come punto privilegiato di osservazione del cambiamento politico della Cina dopo la Prima guerra mondiale. Questo decennio rappresentò un momento di definizione identitaria sia per i comunisti sia per i nazionalisti. La storiografia ne ha sottolineato numerosi aspetti, ma si è finora occupata del periodo 1919-1928 come una preistoria degli anni Trenta piuttosto che come un autonomo segmento di storia cinese. Studi recenti hanno superato implicitamente questo approccio criticando due date periodizzanti fondamentali per il Novecento cinese: la nascita della Repubblica nazionalista (1911) e la nascita della Repubblica Popolare (1949). A metà tra queste due date, gli anni Venti sono emersi come snodo decisivo nel passaggio da impero a Stato nazionale, durante cui si definì un nuovo spazio di discussione politica. Questo processo, pur interno, subì l’influsso delle strategie internazionali di sovietici e statunitensi dando vita a una nuova visione non soltanto della rivoluzione ma anche dello Stato post-rivoluzionario. Le classi dirigenti nazionalista e comunista, durante la collaborazione, si rivelarono dinamiche e tale “competizione” si trasferì anche all’interno di ciascun movimento diventando un fattore determinante per il successo o il fallimento del partito inteso come moderna formazione politica.
The thesis focuses on the Chinese Nationalist Party in the 1920s as a special standpoint to analyze the political changes in China after the World War I. That decade was crucial for shaping the identity of nationalists and communists. Many works have already examined some aspects, but they mostly considered the years 1919-1928 as a pre-history of the Thirties rather than an autonomous part of Chinese history. Recent studies have overcome this approach by criticizing two of the main periodization in the Chinese twentieth century: the birth of the nationalist Republic (1911) and the birth of the People’s Republic (1949). Halfway, the 1920s stood out as a critical juncture in the transition from empire to nation-state. A new space of political discussion was defined. The process, albeit internal, was under the influence of the USSR and US international strategies and gave birth not only to a new vision of the revolution, but also to a vision of the post-revolutionary state. Also, the nationalist and communist leaderships turned out to be dynamic. That "competition" may be seen also within the two political movements and became a shaping factor for the success or failure of the party as a modern political formation.
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CAPISANI, LORENZO MARCO. "La Cina da impero a Stato nazionale: la definizione di uno spazio politico negli anni Venti." Doctoral thesis, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/10280/20588.

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La tesi si concentra sul Partito Nazionalista Cinese negli anni Venti come punto privilegiato di osservazione del cambiamento politico della Cina dopo la Prima guerra mondiale. Questo decennio rappresentò un momento di definizione identitaria sia per i comunisti sia per i nazionalisti. La storiografia ne ha sottolineato numerosi aspetti, ma si è finora occupata del periodo 1919-1928 come una preistoria degli anni Trenta piuttosto che come un autonomo segmento di storia cinese. Studi recenti hanno superato implicitamente questo approccio criticando due date periodizzanti fondamentali per il Novecento cinese: la nascita della Repubblica nazionalista (1911) e la nascita della Repubblica Popolare (1949). A metà tra queste due date, gli anni Venti sono emersi come snodo decisivo nel passaggio da impero a Stato nazionale, durante cui si definì un nuovo spazio di discussione politica. Questo processo, pur interno, subì l’influsso delle strategie internazionali di sovietici e statunitensi dando vita a una nuova visione non soltanto della rivoluzione ma anche dello Stato post-rivoluzionario. Le classi dirigenti nazionalista e comunista, durante la collaborazione, si rivelarono dinamiche e tale “competizione” si trasferì anche all’interno di ciascun movimento diventando un fattore determinante per il successo o il fallimento del partito inteso come moderna formazione politica.
The thesis focuses on the Chinese Nationalist Party in the 1920s as a special standpoint to analyze the political changes in China after the World War I. That decade was crucial for shaping the identity of nationalists and communists. Many works have already examined some aspects, but they mostly considered the years 1919-1928 as a pre-history of the Thirties rather than an autonomous part of Chinese history. Recent studies have overcome this approach by criticizing two of the main periodization in the Chinese twentieth century: the birth of the nationalist Republic (1911) and the birth of the People’s Republic (1949). Halfway, the 1920s stood out as a critical juncture in the transition from empire to nation-state. A new space of political discussion was defined. The process, albeit internal, was under the influence of the USSR and US international strategies and gave birth not only to a new vision of the revolution, but also to a vision of the post-revolutionary state. Also, the nationalist and communist leaderships turned out to be dynamic. That "competition" may be seen also within the two political movements and became a shaping factor for the success or failure of the party as a modern political formation.
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Kuo, Chih-Ting, and 郭致廷. "Administration of Wang Jingwei Government(1940-1945)." Thesis, 2016. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/20572345272895876194.

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碩士
國立中興大學
歷史學系所
104
Around the break-out of War of Resistance Against Japan, China lost both his economic and political centers, Shanghai and Nanking within six months. The disparity of military power between China and Japan is very much in evidence. Therefore, talk of making peace with Japan was considered by some certain Chinese. Moreover, with the war carried on, Japan gradually expanded his occupied territories in China. To avoid the animosity of Chinese toward Japan and to show that this military action was against Chiang Kai-shek’s anti-Japanese government, not China, Japan attempted to seek someone who would be in concert with it to establish a new government. Under the background, Wang Jingwei, the vice president of Kuomintang(KMT), left the sub - capital Chongqing and cooperated with Japan. On the date of 30th, March, 1940, Wang Jingwei announced his “Back to capital” in Nanking and reorganized the government. The establishment of the Wang Jingwei Gorvernment was restructured in the name of "National Government," which regarded itself “orthodox” as well as the Chongqing government. However, the validity of Wang Jingwei Gorvernment was questioned since it couldn’t be largely recognized internationally when it was just established; therefore, Wang Jingwei Gorvernment couldn’t successfully replace the Chongqing government and become the so called "legitimate" China. This study tries to illustrate how Wang Jingwei Gorvernment created the breach in the diplomatic relations through the changes of the world situation while being in such difficulties and fight for the interests of China in the world. In addition, how Wang Jingwei Gorvernment operated is also one topic of this study. The finance is the basis of a government operation. In terms of tax issues, The eminent domain of the first three major tax revenues of China, tariff, salt tax, and general rate, in North China, Central China and the coasts had been in the hands of Japan after the falls of the three areas. The three kinds of taxation involved international trade and civilian goods, and were closely integrated with the local livelihoods in the administrative regions. Therefore, this study tries to illustrate how Wang Jingwei Gorvernment worked when the tax revenues were not under its control at the beginning, and how it dealt with Japan and set up its own financial system after the source of revenue was stabilized, and eventually, extended to the takeover of Chiang''s Government after the war.
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Yun-ping, Yang, and 楊韻平. "Wang Jingwei Regime and Chinese Emigrants in Korea(1940-1945)---A Study of East Asia Order." Thesis, 2005. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/09187276526158151754.

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Books on the topic "Wang Jingwei"

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Wang Jingwei. 2nd ed. Taiyuan Shi: Beiyue wen yi chu ban she, 2010.

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Wang Jingwei. 2nd ed. Taiyuan Shi: Beiyue wen yi chu ban she, 2010.

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Wang, Meizhen. Wang Jingwei zhuan. Taibei Shi: Guo ji wen hua shi ye you xian gong si, 1988.

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Wang Jingwei sheng ping. [Guangzhou]: Guangdong ren min chu ban she, 1996.

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Renyuan, Wan, Wang Xiaohua, and Zhongguo di 2 li shi dang an guan., eds. Wang Jingwei yu Wang wei zheng fu. Xianggang: Shang wu yin shu guan, 1994.

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Jiang Jieshi he Wang Jingwei. Changchun Shi: Jilin wen shi chu ban she, 1994.

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Jiang Jieshi yu Wang Jingwei. Beijing: Tuan jie chu ban she, 2009.

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Nü Han jian yu Wang Jingwei. Beijing: Guo ji wen hua chu ban she, 1997.

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Wang Jingwei fu ni yan jiu. Beijing: Ren min chu ban she, 2008.

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Yunnian, ed. Wang Jingwei cai bao zhi mi. Changsha Shi: Hunan wen yi chu ban she, 1986.

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Book chapters on the topic "Wang Jingwei"

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Martin, Brian G. "Patriotic Collaboration?: Zhou Fohai and the Wang Jingwei Government during the Second Sino-Japanese War." In Japan as the Occupier and the Occupied, 152–71. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137408112_8.

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Davies, Martin, and Jiang Lin. "WANG Zhuorui v. Shanghai Jingyi Freight Forwarding Co., Ltd." In Chinese Maritime Cases, 1003–8. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-63239-0_53.

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Chambers, Travis. "Disillusioned Diplomacy." In Sino-American Relations. Nieuwe Prinsengracht 89 1018 VR Amsterdam Nederland: Amsterdam University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789463726368_ch03.

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This chapter interprets and lays bare a new perspective on US-China relations by analyzing official American policy towards Wang Jingwei’s Reorganized National Government from 1938–1945. It examines the intricate diplomatic network present in World War II China and narrates the evolution of US policy towards Wang Jingwei, from the initiation of his relations with Japan, to the establishment of the Reorganized Government, and to the official policy formulation of the US State Department. Analysis and interpretation of US policy towards Wang Jingwei completes a piece of missing history in US-China relations and provides a more nuanced historical narrative.
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"Contextualizing the Wang Jingwei Regime." In Iconographies of Occupation, 19–38. University of Hawaii Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv1pncr0k.5.

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"Wang Jingwei and the “Nanjing Nationalist Government”:." In Toward a History Beyond Borders, 205–39. BRILL, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9781684175147_010.

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"Chapter 1 Contextualizing the Wang Jingwei Regime." In Iconographies of Occupation, 19–38. University of Hawaii Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9780824887704-003.

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Kobayashi, Motohiro, Bob Tadashi Wakabayashi, and Aaron Skabelund. "An Opium Tug-of-War: Japan versus the Wang Jingwei Regime." In Opium RegimesChina, Britain, and Japan, 1839-1952, 344–56. University of California Press, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520220096.003.0065.

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Barrett, David P. "FIVE. The Wang Jingwei Regime, 1940-1945: Continuities and Disjunctures with Nationalist China." In Chinese Collaboration with Japan, 1932-1945, 102–15. Stanford University Press, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9780804764384-009.

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Ke-Wen, Wang. "ONE. Wang Jingwei and the Policy Origins of the "Peace Movement," 1932-1937." In Chinese Collaboration with Japan, 1932-1945, 21–37. Stanford University Press, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9780804764384-005.

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"A New Stage in the Chinese Revolution: From Chiang Kai-shek to Wang Jingwei." In Karl Radek on China, 385–417. BRILL, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004432062_011.

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