Childhood in Shadow of War
- By Guest blogger
- 28 May, 2016
- No Comments
Margaret Blair was born in Shanghai in 1936 and spent the years from 1942 to 1945 in a Japanese internment camp. In her memoir Gudao, Lone Islet she paints a vivid … Continue Reading →
War On Display
- By Guest blogger
- 11 May, 2016
- No Comments
The Armed Forces Museum in Taipei is one of the best places in the world to view objects from the Second Sino-Japanese War. Ryan Daniels recently paid the museum a … Continue Reading →
What War Does to Human Hearts: Interview with Geling Yan
- By Guest blogger
- 30 April, 2016
- No Comments
The Second Sino-Japanese War formed the backdrop for Chinese-born author Geling Yan’s novella 13 Flowers of War, which was adapted for the big screen as The Flowers of War. Now … Continue Reading →
Flying ‘The Hump’
- By Guest blogger
- 23 April, 2016
- 2 Comments
This article, about one of the many American pilots who risked their lives to keep China supplied across the ‘Hump’ air route, is written by seasoned journalist George Morris. It … Continue Reading →
China’s War as History: A Paradox
- By Peter Harmsen
- 9 April, 2016
- 5 Comments
How have western views of China’s role in World War Two changed over the past couple of decades? Recently, the Chinese website The Paper published an article on its history channel on this … Continue Reading →
‘Uninvited’ War and the Mongol Trophy
- By Guest blogger
- 3 April, 2016
- No Comments
When Japan surrendered in 1945, the race was on to grab as much territory in China as possible. Participants included Nationalist China and the Soviet Union, but also, unknown to … Continue Reading →
China’s Schindler
- By Guest blogger
- 23 March, 2016
- No Comments
This article, by Dirk de Klein, was originally carried on his website. It is reproduced here with his kind permission. Ho Feng-Shan (born September 10, 1901 in Yiyang, Hunan; died … Continue Reading →
Macao and the British reoccupation of Hong Kong
- By Guest blogger
- 16 March, 2016
- No Comments
This article is part of a large online project — End of Empire — launched by the Nordic Institute of Asian Studies (NIAS). The idea is simple: To describe day … Continue Reading →
The Fate of Japanese Settlers in Manchuria
- By Guest blogger
- 2 March, 2016
- 7 Comments
Large numbers of Japanese fell into Soviet hands at the end of World War Two. This happened to both soldiers (see photo above) and civilians. This article is part of a large online … Continue Reading →
A Chinese Child Soldier Speaks
- By Guest blogger
- 21 February, 2016
- 1 Comment
Huang Meng-hou, now 84 years old and a resident of Taiwan, served as a child soldier in the army of the collaborationist government headed by Wang Jingwei (or Wang Ching-wei). In … Continue Reading →