details - China in the World - Australian National University

Transcription

details - China in the World - Australian National University
PUBLIC LECTURE
Thursday 16 April 2015, 5:30-7:00 pm
The Auditorium, China in the World Building #188
Fellows Lane, The Australian National University, Canberra
Undesired Outcomes:
China’s Approach to Border
Disputes during the Early
Cold War
Professor Shen Zhihua, East China Normal University, China
T
his presentation will explore the evolution of China’s border policy through
the 1950s and 1960s. Drawing on newly available archival sources and
recent secondary literature, it will argue that during the early Cold War, the
PRC leadership lacked a clear sense of the concept of national sovereignty,
and often attempted to use territorial negotiations with China’s neighbours to
bargain for broader foreign policy objectives. The presentation will also examine
the historical and political assumptions underlying Mao Zedong’s approach
to border questions, suggesting that Mao combined longstanding imperial
assumptions about universal emperorship with the modern, Marxist idea of a
world revolution.
SHEN ZHIHUA is an historian greatly admired in China as a pioneer of archival research on the Cold War,
the Korean War and Sino-Soviet relations. Internationally renowned for his scholarship, Professor Shen
Zhihua first attracted significant media attention in 1995 when he committed some 1.4 million yuan of his
own money to buy declassified historical archives from Russia. A six-year project (1996-2002) grew out
of this acquisition, which Professor Shen Zhihua undertook in collaboration with the Chinese Academy
of Social Sciences (CASS), involving the translation, collation and editing of the archival materials. The
project led to the publication of the thirty-four-volume Selected Historical Documents of the Soviet Union
苏联历史档案选编, released in instalments from 2002 to 2008. This massive anthology has shaped mainland
scholarship about the Cold War ever since. Professor Shen Zhihua is currently researching and teaching
at the Center for Cold War International History Studies, East China Normal University, Shanghai, China.
Jointly sponsored by
Japan Institute
Korea Institute
China Institute
ANU College of
Asia & the Pacific
Supported by
OPEN AND FREE TO THE PUBLIC
RSVP by 10 April
https://bit.ly/SanFranshadow
E [email protected]
W http://tinyurl.com/sanfranpeace