|
|
|
UCLA中国研究中心研讨会 - “中国的守望者:一个北京汤姆的自白” |
|
作者:RICHARD BAUM | 2010/3/31 11:36:35 | 浏览:3181 | 评论:2 |
|
|
|
|
China Watcher: Confessions of a Peking Tom
RICHARD BAUM discusses his new book
Monday, April 05, 2010 4:00 PM - 5:30 PM 10383 Bunche Hall UCLA
This illuminating memoir by Richard Baum, a senior China scholar and sometime policy advisor, reflects on forty years of learning about and interacting with the People's Republic of China, from the height of Maoism during the author's UC Berkeley student days in the volatile 1960s through to globalization. Anecdotes from Baum's professional life illustrate the alternately peculiar, frustrating, fascinating, and risky activity of China watching--the process by which outsiders gather and decipher official and unofficial information to figure out what is really going on behind China's veil of political secrecy and propaganda. Baum writes entertainingly, telling his narrative with witty stories about people, places, and eras.
* * *
Richard Baum (A.B., Political Science, UCLA, 1962; Ph.D., Political Science, UC Berkeley, 1970) is Professor of Political Science at UCLA and Director Emeritus of the UCLA Center for Chinese Studies. His publications include China in Ferment: Perspectives on the Cultural Revolution; Prelude to Revolution: Mao, the Party, and the Peasant Question, 1962-1966; Reform and Reaction in Post-Mao China: The Road to Tiananmen; and Burying Mao: Chinese Politics in the Age of Deng Xiaoping. He is the founder and list manager of Chinapol, the world's largest dedicated listserv for professional China scholars, journalists, and policy analysts. His current research focuses on (1) the impact of China's post-Mao reforms on local governance in the PRC; (2) the impact of globalization on political development in post-reform China; and (3) U.S.-China relations and the prospects for war and peace in the Taiwan Strait. Professor Baum has served on the editorial board of the Journal of Contemporary China, China Quarterly, China Information, Asian Survey, and Communist and Post-Communist Studies. He has been a media commentator with CNN International, the BBC, NPR, Asian Wall Street Journal, South China Morning Post, Los Angeles Times, and the Voice of America, among others. |
|
|
|