Overcoming a stigmatic past: National Central University students in Nanjing, China, and the politics of wartime history

IF 1 2区 社会学 Q2 AREA STUDIES Modern Asian Studies Pub Date : 2024-03-18 DOI:10.1017/s0026749x23000434
Jonathan Henshaw
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Abstract

The Japanese empire’s occupation of China during the Second World War left a complex and bitter legacy in postwar Chinese society. This article examines the occupation and its legacies at the grassroots, taking university students in Nanjing as a case study in occupation history and ‘bottom-up’ wartime commemoration. These young people, who studied at National Central University (NCU) under the Japanese-backed Reorganized National Government of Wang Jingwei, organized three protest movements between 1940 and 1945, defying puppet authorities, Japanese forces, and, after the war, the returning Chongqing Nationalist government, as they campaigned against corruption, opium sales, and discriminatory treatment over their status as ‘bogus students’ who supposedly received Japanese ‘enslavement education’ from a collaborationist regime. In the 1980s, after decades of marginalization under the People’s Republic of China, these former protestors began holding reunions, documenting their experiences, and campaigning for recognition from Nanjing University, which eventually recognized them as alumni. Drawing primarily on privately printed alumni memoirs and commemorative volumes, this article positions the protests in the history of youth activism in Nanjing. That NCU students were able to rehabilitate themselves was due to their own organizational prowess and a sympathetic reception from the leadership of a cash-strapped Nanjing University, though the interests of fellow alumnus Jiang Zemin and the Communist Party-state still set the parameters of historical memory. In this, the example of the Nanjing students complicates the top-down role of the state, as described in much previous scholarship on Chinese wartime commemoration, in producing politically motivated nationalist narratives of wartime history.
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克服耻辱的过去:中国南京中央大学学生与战时历史政治
日本帝国在第二次世界大战期间占领中国,给战后中国社会留下了复杂而痛苦的遗产。本文以南京的大学生为案例,研究了占领史和 "自下而上 "的战时纪念活动,探讨了占领及其在基层留下的影响。这些在日本支持的汪精卫改组国民政府统治下的国立中央大学学习的年轻人,在1940年至1945年期间组织了三次抗议运动,反抗傀儡当局、日军以及战后回归的重庆国民政府,他们反对腐败、鸦片销售,以及对他们作为 "假学生 "身份的歧视性待遇,他们被认为从一个合作主义政权那里接受了日本的 "奴役教育"。20 世纪 80 年代,在中华人民共和国统治下被边缘化数十年后,这些前抗议者开始举行同学聚会,记录他们的经历,并争取南京大学的承认,最终南京大学承认了他们的校友身份。本文主要通过私人印刷的校友回忆录和纪念册,将抗议活动置于南京青年活动史中。南京大学学生能够恢复名誉,得益于他们自身的组织能力以及资金短缺的南京大学领导层对他们的同情,尽管江泽民校友和共产党国家的利益仍然决定着历史记忆的参数。在这一点上,南京大学学生的例子使以往许多关于中国战时纪念活动的学术研究中所描述的国家自上而下的角色复杂化,这种角色产生了以政治为动机的战时历史民族主义叙事。
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来源期刊
Modern Asian Studies
Modern Asian Studies AREA STUDIES-
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
11.10%
发文量
63
期刊介绍: Modern Asian Studies promotes original, innovative and rigorous research on the history, sociology, economics and culture of modern Asia. Covering South Asia, South-East Asia, China, Japan and Korea, the journal is published in six parts each year. It welcomes articles which deploy inter-disciplinary and comparative research methods. Modern Asian Studies specialises in the publication of longer monographic essays based on path-breaking new research; it also carries substantial synoptic essays which illuminate the state of the broad field in fresh ways. It contains a book review section which offers detailed analysis of important new publications in the field.
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