University of Toronto Press
Harbin
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Mark Gamsa
About this book
Told alongside the life of a unique city resident, Harbin: A Cross-Cultural Biography is the history of Russian-Chinese relations in the Manchurian city of Harbin.
Author / Editor information
Mark Gamsa is an associate professor in the School of History at Tel Aviv University.
Reviews
“Harbin: A Cross-Cultural Biography is a remarkable feat of research across multiple languages and archives, as well as a compellingly original, stylishly written, and surprisingly intimate book.”
Stig Thøgersen, Aarhus University:
“The book builds on impressive research, contains stimulating discussions of the relationship
between biography and general history, and thus deserves to be read not only as the story of a remarkable man but also, more broadly, as a fascinating attempt to understand the life of an individual in the context of his multicultural environment.”
Willard Sunderland, University of Cincinnati:
"There are many reasons to like this book. The writing is elegant, with frequent memorable turns of phrase. The research in Russian, Chinese, and European-language sources is deep and rich, and Gamsa’s feel for his subject is remarkable. One senses on every page his balanced affection for Harbin and even for Budberg, despite his frankness about their many shared imperfections."
David Wolff, Hokkaido University:
"Specialists will draw much eclectic material about Harbin from Gamsa and enjoy the author’s often insightful ideas about cross-cultural contact and more."
Austin Jersild, Old Dominion University:
"This is a fascinating and well-researched exploration of the Russian [and] Chinese cultural encounter in Harbin, based on the extensive use of sources in both Russian and Chinese."
N. Pianciola, Nazarbayev University:
"The book is a masterful analysis of the consequences that traumatic shifts in power relations could have for the life of individuals."
James Carter, Professor of History, Saint Joseph’s University:
"We have in Mark Gamsa a capable historian who is also something of a poet. It is clear from the high quality of scholarship that he has immersed himself in the history and historiography of Harbin for some time. This book is a refreshing and creative approach to history as a humanity."
Sergey Glebov, Associate Professor of History, Smith College and Amherst College:
"The unique strength of Mark Gamsa’s contribution to the study of Harbin and Russian‐Chinese relations is the ease with which he moves from the Russian to the Chinese cultural and political scenes. He is able to not only reconstruct in painstaking detail the life of Roger Budberg but also provide a broad sweep of the history of Manchuria in one of the most turbulent eras of modern history. Engaging with archival materials from at least six countries and in at least four languages, the research in this book is superb and of the highest possible quality."
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
vii -
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List of Illustrations
ix -
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Introduction
1 -
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1 Of Ethnicity and Identity
14 -
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2 Beginnings
35 -
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3 Intermediaries and Channels of Communication
57 -
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4 A Chinese-German Flower
87 -
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5 Daily Life in a Mixed City
116 -
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6 Trials and Endings
141 -
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7 Russians and Chinese under Japanese Rule
175 -
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8 Kharbintsy and Ha’erbin ren
201 -
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Epilogue: The General and the Particular
218 -
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Notes
243 -
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Glossary of Chinese Terms
321 -
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Bibliography
331 -
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Index
375