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  21. The Cultural Revolution</font></font>
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  31. <A HREF='bibtxt2.html'>Bibliography Index</A></h5></center>
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  35. <hr><CENTER><P><FONT SIZE=+1><a class=alp href='#A'>A</a> <a class=alp href='#B'>B</a> <a class=alp href='#C'>C</a> <a class=alp href='#D'>D</a> <a class=alp>E</a> <a class=alp href='#F'>F</a> <a class=alp href='#G'>G</a> <a class=alp href='#H'>H</a> <a class=alp>I</a> <a class=alp href='#J'>J</a> <a class=alp href='#K'>K</a> <a class=alp href='#L'>L</a> <a class=alp href='#M'>M</a> <a class=alp href='#N'>N</a> <a class=alp>O</a> <a class=alp href='#P'>P</a> <a class=alp>Q</a> <a class=alp href='#R'>R</a> <a class=alp href='#S'>S</a> <a class=alp href='#T'>T</a> <a class=alp>U</a> <a class=alp>V</a> <a class=alp href='#W'>W</a> <a class=alp>X</a> <a class=alp href='#Y'>Y</a> <a class=alp href='#Z'>Z</a> </FONT></A></P></CENTER>
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  40. Andreas, Joel.&nbsp; <i>Rise of the Red Engineers:</i>&nbsp; <i>The Cultural Revolution and the Origins of China's New Class.</i>&nbsp; Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2009.<br><br>
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  43. Barme, Geremie R.&nbsp; <i>In the Red:</i>&nbsp; <i>On Contemporary Chinese Culture.</i>&nbsp; New York: Columbia University Press, 1999.<br><br>
  44. Barnouin, Barbara.&nbsp; <i>Ten years of turbulence:</i>&nbsp; <i>the Chinese cultural revolution.</i>&nbsp; Publication of the Graduate Institute of International Studies, Geneva. London; New York: Kegan Paul International; New York: Distributed by Routledge, Chapman & Hall Inc., 1993.<br><br>
  45. Barnouin, Barbara; Yu, Changgen.&nbsp; <i>Chinese Foreign Policy During the Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; London: Kegan Paul International; distributed by: New York: Columbia University Press, 1997.<br><br>
  46. Berry, Chris.&nbsp; <i>Postsocialist Cinema in Post-mao China:</i>&nbsp; <i>The Cultural Revolution After the Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; New York: Routledge, 2008.<br><br>
  47. Brown, Kerry.&nbsp; <i>The purge of the Inner Mongolian People's Party in the Chinese cultural revolution, 1967-69:</i>&nbsp; <i>a function of language, power and violence.</i>&nbsp; Folkestone, Kent: Global Oriental, 2006.<br><br>
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  50. Chakrabarti, Sreemati.&nbsp; <i>Mao, China's intellectuals and the cultural revolution.</i>&nbsp; New Delhi: Sanchar Publishing House, 1998.<br><br>
  51. Chan, Anita.&nbsp; <i>Children of Mao:</i>&nbsp; <i>Personality development and political activism in the Red Guard generation.</i>&nbsp; Seattle, WA: University of Washington Press, 1985.<br><br>
  52. Chen, Jack.&nbsp; <i>Inside the Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; London: Sheldon, 1976.<br><br>
  53. Chen, Ruoxi.&nbsp; <i>The execution of mayor Yin and other stories from the great proletarian Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; (eds. Ing, Nancy & Goldblatt, Howard). Revised edition. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2004.<br><br>
  54. Chen, Yuan-tsung.&nbsp; <i>Return to the middle kingdom:</i>&nbsp; <i>one family, three revolutionaries, and the birth of modern China.</i>&nbsp; New York: Sterling Publishing Company, 2008.<br><br>
  55. Cheng, Nien.&nbsp; <i>Life and death in Shanghai.</i>&nbsp; New York: Penguin Books, 2008.<br><br>
  56. <i>China's Countryside:</i>&nbsp; <i>A Vast School for Her Youth.</i>&nbsp; Peking: Foreign Languages Press, 1976.<br><br>
  57. <i>China's great proletarian Cultural Revolution:</i>&nbsp; <i>master narratives and post-Mao counternarratives.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Chong, Woei Lien). World Social Change. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2002.<br><br>
  58. <i>China's Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution:</i>&nbsp; <i>Master Narratives and Post-Mao Counternarratives.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Chong, Woei Lien). Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Incorporated 2002.<br><br>
  59. <i>The Chinese cultural revolution reconsidered:</i>&nbsp; <i>beyond purge and holocaust.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Law, Kam-yee). New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2003.<br><br>
  60. Cleverley, John.&nbsp; <i>In the Lap of Tigers:</i>&nbsp; <i>The Communist Labor University of Jiangxi Province.</i>&nbsp; Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2000.<br><br>
  61. Compestine, Ying Chang.&nbsp; <i>Revolution is not a dinner party.</i>&nbsp; Waterville, Maine: Thorndike Press, 2008.<br><br>
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  64. Dittmer, Lowell.&nbsp; <i>Liu Shaoqi and the Chinese Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; Armonk: M. E. Sharpe Incorporated, 1998.<br><br>
  65. Dittmer, Lowell.&nbsp; <i>Ethics and rhetoric of the Chinese Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; Studies in Chinese Terminology; No. 19. Berkeley: Center for Chinese Studies, Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California, 1981.<br><br>
  66. Domes, Jurgen.&nbsp; <i>P'eng Te-huai:</i>&nbsp; <i>the man and the image.</i>&nbsp; Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1985.<br><br>
  67. Dutton, Michael.&nbsp; <i>Policing Chinese Politics:</i>&nbsp; <i>A History.</i>&nbsp; Durham: Duke University Press, 2004.<br><br>
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  70. Feng, Chi-tsai.&nbsp; <i>Ten years of madness:</i>&nbsp; <i>Oral histories of China's Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; San Francisco, CA: China Books, 1996.<br><br>
  71. Feng, Jicai.&nbsp; <i>Voices from the whirlwind:</i>&nbsp; <i>an oral history of the Chinese Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; (Reprint of: One Hundred People's Ten Years. Beijing: Foreign Languages Press, 1990). Beijing: Foreign Languages Press; New York: Pantheon Books, 1991.<br><br>
  72. Forster, Keith.&nbsp; <i>Rebellion and factionalism in a Chinese province:</i>&nbsp; <i>Zhejiang, 1966-1976.</i>&nbsp; Armonk: M. E. Sharpe, 1990.<br><br>
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  75. Gao Yuan.&nbsp; <i>Born red:</i>&nbsp; <i>a chronicle of the cultural revolution.</i>&nbsp; Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1987.<br><br>
  76. Gao, Mobo C. F..&nbsp; <i>The battle for China's past:</i>&nbsp; <i>Mao and the Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; London: Pluto Press, 2008.<br><br>
  77. Gay, Kathlyn.&nbsp; <i>Mao Zedong's China.</i>&nbsp; Breckenridge, CO: Twenty-First Century Books, 2007.<br><br>
  78. Gittings, John.&nbsp; <i>The Changing Face of China:</i>&nbsp; <i>From Mao to Market.</i>&nbsp; Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press, 2005.<br><br>
  79. Goldman, Merle.&nbsp; <i>From Comrade to Citizen:</i>&nbsp; <i>The Struggle for Political Rights in China.</i>&nbsp; Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2005.<br><br>
  80. Gong, Xiaoxia.&nbsp; <i>Repressive movements and the politics of victimization:</i>&nbsp; <i>patronage and persecution during the Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; Thesis (Ph. D.) -- Harvard University. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University, 1995.<br><br>
  81. Grieder, James.&nbsp; <i>Hu Shih and the Chinese Renaissance:</i>&nbsp; <i>Liberalism in the Chinese Revolution.</i>&nbsp; Reprint of Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1970. Somerville: Replica Books (division of Baker & Taylor), 2000.<br><br>
  82. Guo, Jian&nbsp; <i>Historical dictionary of the Chinese Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; Historical Dictionaries of Ancient Civilizations and Historical Eras. Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press, Inc. 2006.<br><br>
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  85. Han, Dongping.&nbsp; <i>The unknown cultural revolution:</i>&nbsp; <i>life and change in a Chinese village.</i>&nbsp; New York: Monthly Review Press, 2008.<br><br>
  86. Hansen, Joseph.&nbsp; <i>Maoism vs. Bolshevism:</i>&nbsp; <i>The 1965 Catastrophe in Indonesia, China's "Cultural Revolution" & the Disintegration of World Stalinism.</i>&nbsp; New York: Pathfinder Press, 1998.<br><br>
  87. He, Yuhuai.&nbsp; <i>Cycles of repression and relaxation:</i>&nbsp; <i>Politico-literary events in China, 1976-1989.</i>&nbsp; Bochum: N. Brockmeyer, 1992.<br><br>
  88. Hinton, William.&nbsp; <i>Hundred Day War:</i>&nbsp; <i>The Cultural Revolution at Tsinghua University.</i>&nbsp; New York: Monthly Review Press, 1972.<br><br>
  89. Huang, Shaorong.&nbsp; <i>To Rebel is Justified:</i>&nbsp; <i>A Rhetorical Study of China's Cultural Revolution Movement 1966-1969.</i>&nbsp; Lanham: University Press of America, 1996.<br><br>
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  92. Ji, Chaozhu.&nbsp; <i>The man on Mao's right:</i>&nbsp; <i>from Harvard yard to Tiananmen Square, my life inside China's Foreign Ministry.</i>&nbsp; New York: Random House, 2008.<br><br>
  93. Ji, Chaozhu.&nbsp; <i>The man on Mao's right [sound recording]:</i>&nbsp; <i>from Harvard yard to Tiananmen Square, my life inside China's Foreign Ministry.</i>&nbsp; Old Saybrook, Connecticut: Tantor Media, 2008.<br><br>
  94. Jiang, Ji-li.&nbsp; <i>Red scarf girl:</i>&nbsp; <i>a memoir of the Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; New York: HarperCollins, 2008.<br><br>
  95. Jiaqi, Yan; Gao, Gao.&nbsp; <i>Turbulent decade:</i>&nbsp; <i>a history of the cultural revolution.</i>&nbsp; Honolulu, HI: University of Hawai'i Press, 1996.<br><br>
  96. Jin, Qiu.&nbsp; <i>The Culture of Power:</i>&nbsp; <i>The Lin Biao Incident in the Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1999.<br><br>
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  99. Kwong, Julia.&nbsp; <i>Cultural revolution in China's schools:</i>&nbsp; <i>May 1966-April 1969.</i>&nbsp; Education and Society. Hoover Press Publication, 364. Stanford: Hoover Institution Press, 1988.<br><br>
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  102. Langley, Andrew.&nbsp; <i>The Cultural Revolution:</i>&nbsp; <i>years of chaos in China.</i>&nbsp; Mankato, Minnesota: Compass Point Books, 2008.<br><br>
  103. Lee, Hong Yong.&nbsp; <i>The Politics of the Chinese Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; Berkeley: University of California Press, 1978.<br><br>
  104. Li-Marcus, Moying.&nbsp; <i>Snow falling in spring:</i>&nbsp; <i>Coming of age in China during the cultural revolution.</i>&nbsp; New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2008.<br><br>
  105. Liang, Heng; Shapiro, Judith.&nbsp; <i>Son of the revolution.</i>&nbsp; New York: Vintage Books, 2008.<br><br>
  106. Lin, Jing.&nbsp; <i>The Red Guards' path to violence:</i>&nbsp; <i>political, educational, and psychological factors.</i>&nbsp; New York: Praeger, 1991.<br><br>
  107. Liu, Guokai; Chan, Anita.&nbsp; <i>A brief analysis of the Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; Armonk, NY: M. E. Sharpe, 1987.<br><br>
  108. Lu, Xing.&nbsp; <i>Rhetoric of the Chinese Cultural Revolution:</i>&nbsp; <i>the impact on Chinese thought, culture, and communication.</i>&nbsp; Columbia, S.C.: University of South Carolina Press, 2004.<br><br>
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  111. Ma, Jisen.&nbsp; <i>The cultural revolution in the foreign ministry of China.</i>&nbsp; Hong Kong: Chinese University Press, 2004.<br><br>
  112. MacFarquhar, Roderick.&nbsp; <i>The Coming of the Cataclysm, 1961-1966.</i>&nbsp; The Origins of the Cultural Revolution, 3. Oxford; New York: Published for the Royal Institute of International Affairs, Studies of the East Asian Institute by Oxford University Press and Columbia University Press, 1997.<br><br>
  113. MacFarquhar, Roderick.&nbsp; <i>The Great Leap Forward, 1958-1960.</i>&nbsp; The Origins of the Cultural Revolution: V. 2. Studies of the East Asian Institute. The Royal Institute of International Affairs, the East Asian Institute of Columbia University, & the Research Institute on International Change of Columbia University. New York: Columbia University Press, 1983.<br><br>
  114. <i>Mao's children in new China:</i>&nbsp; <i>Voices from the Red Guard generation.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Jiang, Yarong). New York: Routledge, 2000.<br><br>
  115. Maomao (Deng, Rong).&nbsp; <i>Deng Xiaoping and the Cultural Revolution:</i>&nbsp; <i>a daughter recalls the critical years.</i>&nbsp; (trans. Shapiro, Sidney). 1st American edition. New York : C. Bertelsmann, 2005.<br><br>
  116. Meaney, Constance Squires.&nbsp; <i>Stability and the industrial elite in China and the Soviet Union.</i>&nbsp; China Research Monographs; No. 34. Berkeley: Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California-Berkeley, Center for Chinese Studies, 1988.<br><br>
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  119. <i>New perspectives on the Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Joseph, William A.; Wong, Christine P. W.; Zweig, David). Harvard Contemporary China Series; 8. Cambridge, MA: Council on East Asian Studies/Harvard University: Distributed by Harvard University Press, 1991.<br><br>
  120. Niu, Niu.&nbsp; <i>No tears for Mao:</i>&nbsp; <i>Growing up in the Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; Chicago: Academy Chicago Publishers, Limited, 2001.<br><br>
  121. Niu-Niu.&nbsp; <i>No tears for Mao:</i>&nbsp; <i>growing up in the Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; Chicago: Academy Chicago Publishers, 1995.<br><br>
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  124. <i>Paragons of Chinese Courage:</i>&nbsp; <i>Ten Who Braved the Storm of the Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Guangming Daily Staff). New York: State Mutual Book &amp; Periodical Service, Limited, 1990.<br><br>
  125. Perry, Elizabeth; Li, Xun.&nbsp; <i>Proletarian Power:</i>&nbsp; <i>Shanghai in the Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; Transitions: Asia & Asian America Series. Boulder: Westview Press: 2000.<br><br>
  126. <i>Picturing Power in the People's Republic of China:</i>&nbsp; <i>Posters of the Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Evans, Harriet). Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 1999.<br><br>
  127. Powell, Patricia; Huo, Shitao.&nbsp; <i>Mao's graphic voice:</i>&nbsp; <i>Pictorial posters from the Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; Madison: Elvehjem Museum of Art, University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1996.<br><br>
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  130. Roberts, Rosemary A.&nbsp; <i>Maoist model theatre:</i>&nbsp; <i>the semiotics of gender and sexuality in the Chinese Cultural Revolution (1966-1976).</i>&nbsp; Leiden; Boston: Brill, 2010.<br><br>
  131. Rosen, Stanley.&nbsp; <i>The Origins and Development of the Red Guards in China.</i>&nbsp; Ann Arbor: University Microfilms International, <br><br>
  132. Rosen, Stanley.&nbsp; <i>Red Guard Factionalism and the Cultural Revolution in Guangzhou.</i>&nbsp; Westview Replica Edition. Boulder: Westview Press, 1982.<br><br>
  133. Ross, James R. (James Rodman).&nbsp; <i>Caught in a tornado:</i>&nbsp; <i>a Chinese American woman survives the Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; Boston: Northeastern University Press, c1994.<br><br>
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  136. Schoenhals, Michael.&nbsp; <i>China's Cultural Revolution, 1966-1969:</i>&nbsp; <i>Not a dinner party.</i>&nbsp; East Gate Reader. Armonk, NY: M. E. Sharpe, 1996.<br><br>
  137. <i>Seeds of fire:</i>&nbsp; <i>Chinese voices of conscience.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Barme, Geremie; Minford, John). New York: Hill and Wang, 1988.<br><br>
  138. <i>Selected essays on the study of philosophy by workers, peasants, and soldiers.</i>&nbsp; Peking, Foreign Languages Press, 1971.<br><br>
  139. Song, Yongyi; Sun, Dajin.&nbsp; <i>The Cultural Revolution, A Bibliography, 1966-1996.</i>&nbsp; Bibliographical Series, No. VI. Cambridge: Harvard-Yenching Library, 1998.<br><br>
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  142. Teiwes, Frederick C.&nbsp; <i>The end of the Maoist era:</i>&nbsp; <i>Chinese politics during the twilight of the Cultural Revolution, 1972-1976.</i>&nbsp; Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 2007.<br><br>
  143. Teiwes, Frederick C.; Sun, Warren.&nbsp; <i>The tragedy of Lin Biao:</i>&nbsp; <i>riding the tiger during the cultural revolution, 1966-1971.</i>&nbsp; Honolulu, HI: University of Hawai'i Press, 1996.<br><br>
  144. Teiwes, Frederick; Sun, Warren.&nbsp; <i>The End of the Maoist Era:</i>&nbsp; <i>Chinese Politics During the Twilight of the Cultural Revolution, 1972-1976.</i>&nbsp; Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 2007.<br><br>
  145. Thurston, Anne F.&nbsp; <i>Enemies of the people:</i>&nbsp; <i>The ordeal of intellectuals in China's great Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1988.<br><br>
  146. Thurston, Anne F.&nbsp; <i>Enemies of the people.</i>&nbsp; 1st ed. New York: Knopf: Distributed by Random House, 1987.<br><br>
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  150. Walder, Andrew G.&nbsp; <i>Fractured rebellion:</i>&nbsp; <i>the Beijing Red Guard movement.</i>&nbsp; Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2009.<br><br>
  151. Wang, Gang.&nbsp; <i>English.</i>&nbsp; (Fiction). New York: Viking Adult, 2009.<br><br>
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  153. Wang, Youqin.&nbsp; <i>Student Attacks Against Teachers:</i>&nbsp; <i>The Revolution of 1966.</i>&nbsp; Paper presented at the conference, "The Cultural Revolution in Retrospect," Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, July 4-6, 1996; presented at the Association of Asian Studies annual meeting, Chicago, March 14-16, 1997. <a href = "http://museums.cnd.org/CR/english/articles/violence.htm">On-line at: Virtual Museum of Cultural Revolution:</a> http://museums.cnd.org/CR/english/research.html, last accessed, 2002.<br><br>
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  155. Wen, Chihua.&nbsp; <i>The Red Mirror:</i>&nbsp; <i>Children of China's Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; Boulder: Westview Press, 1995.<br><br>
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  160. Wu, Emily Yimao; Engelmann, Larry.&nbsp; <i>Feather in the Storm:</i>&nbsp; <i>A Childhood Lost in Chaos.</i>&nbsp; Harpswell, Maine: Anchor, 2008.<br><br>
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  163. Yan Jiaqi.&nbsp; <i>History of the Chinese cultural revolution.</i>&nbsp; Honolulu, HI: University of Hawai'i Press, 1990.<br><br>
  164. Yang, Chiang.&nbsp; <i>Lost in the Crowd:</i>&nbsp; <i>a Cultural Revolution memoir.</i>&nbsp; Melbourne: McPhee Gribble, c1989.<br><br>
  165. Yang, Lan.&nbsp; <i>Chinese Fiction of the Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 1998.<br><br>
  166. Yang, Xiao-ming.&nbsp; <i>The rhetoric of propaganda:</i>&nbsp; <i>a tagmemic analysis of selected documents of the Cultural Revolution of China.</i>&nbsp; American University Studies. Series XIII, Linguistics; Vol. 28. New York: Peter Lang Publishing, Incorporated, 1994.<br><br>
  167. Yang, Xiguang.&nbsp; <i>Captive Spirits:</i>&nbsp; <i>Prisoners of the Cultural Revolution.</i>&nbsp; New York: Oxford University Press, 1997.<br><br>
  168. Ye, Ting-xing.&nbsp; <i>My name is number 4:</i>&nbsp; <i>a true story from the cultural revolution.</i>&nbsp; j Basingstoke, New Hampshire: St. Martin's Griffin, 2008.<br><br>
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  171. Zang, Xiaowei.&nbsp; <i>Children of the Cultural Revolution:</i>&nbsp; <i>Family Life and Political Behavior in Mao's China.</i>&nbsp; Boulder: Westview Press, 1999.<br><br>
  172. Zheng I.; Sym, T. P.&nbsp; <i>Scarlet Memorial:</i>&nbsp; <i>Tales of Cannibalism in Modern China.</i>&nbsp; Boulder: Westview Press, 1996.<br><br>
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  174. </blockquote>
  175. <HR>
  176. <P><FONT SIZE=-1>To contribute to the bibliography, please send e-mail to:<BR>
  177. Marilyn Shea<BR>
  178. Department of Psychology<BR>
  179. University of Maine at Farmington<BR>
  180. <A HREF='mailto:mshea@maine.edu'>mshea@maine.edu</A>
  181. <P> Please format your contributions to match the entries above.</P>
  182. <P>If you have a question, please use the <a href='http://hua.umf.maine.edu/Chinese/guest_book.html'>message board</a>.</FONT><HR>
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