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Governing the Dead : Martyrs, Memorials, and Necrocitizenship in Modern China

Title
Governing the Dead : Martyrs, Memorials, and Necrocitizenship in Modern China / Linh D. Vu.
ISBN
9781501756511
Publication
Ithaca, NY : Cornell University Press, [2021]
Copyright Notice Date
©2021
Physical Description
1 online resource (294 p.) : 11 b&w halftones, 1 map
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
Notes
In English.
Access and use
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
Summary
In Governing the Dead, Linh D. Vu explains how the Chinese Nationalist regime consolidated control by honoring its millions of war dead, allowing China to emerge rapidly from the wreckage of the first half of the twentieth century to become a powerful state, supported by strong nationalistic sentiment and institutional infrastructure. The fall of the empire, internecine conflicts, foreign invasion, and war-related disasters claimed twenty to thirty million Chinese lives. Vu draws on government records, newspapers, and petition letters from mourning families to analyze how the Nationalist regime's commemoration of the dead and compensation of the bereaved actually fortified its central authority. By enshrining the victims of violence as national ancestors, the Republic of China connected citizenship to the idea of the nation, promoting loyalty to the "imagined community." The regime constructed China's first public military cemetery and hundreds of martyrs' shrines, collectively mourned millions of fallen soldiers and civilians, and disbursed millions of yuan to tens of thousands of widows and orphans. The regime thus exerted control over the living by creating the state apparatus necessary to manage the dead. Although the Communist forces prevailed in 1949, the Nationalists had already laid the foundation for the modern nation-state through their governance of dead citizens. The Nationalist policies of glorifying and compensating the loyal dead in an age of catastrophic destruction left an important legacy: violence came to be celebrated rather than lamented.
Variant and related titles
De Gruyter University Press eBook pilot project 2021.
Format
Books / Online
Language
English
Added to Catalog
September 08, 2021
Contents
Frontmatter
Contents
Acknowledgments
Map
Introduction
1. Manufacturing Republican Martyrdom
2. Defining the Necrocitizenry
3. Consoling the Bereaved
4. Gendering the Republic
5. Democratizing National Martyrdom
Epilogue
Appendix: Major Commemoration and Compensation Regulations
List of Characters
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Citation

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