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Eyewitnesses to massacre : American missionaries bear witness to Japanese atrocities in Nanjing / edited by Zhang Kaiyuan ; foreword by Donald MacInnis.

Contributor(s): Publication details: Armonk, N.Y. : M.E. Sharpe, 2001.Description: xxviii, 463 p. : ill., maps ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 0765606844 (alk. paper)
  • 9780765606846 (alk. paper)
  • 0765606852 (pbk. : alk. paper)
  • 9780765606853 (pbk. : alk. paper)
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Online version:: Eyewitnesses to massacre.; Online version:: Eyewitnesses to massacre.DDC classification:
  • 940.53 21
LOC classification:
  • DS796.N2 E93 2001
Contents:
Foreword / Donald MacInnis -- Introduction: Historical Background / Zhang Kaiyuan -- 1. Picture and a Biographical Sketch -- 2. Some Pictures from Nanking, December 15, 1937 -- 3. Excerpts of Letters to the Japanese Embassy, December 14-27, 1937 -- 4. Note on Aftermath of Registration at the University, December 26, 1937 -- 5. Letter to Friends, January 10, 1938 -- 6. Excerpts of Letters to Mr. Allison of the American Embassy, January 14-June 16, 1938 -- 7. Letters to Wife, February 1, 13, 1938 -- 8. Letter from Timperley, February 17, 1938 -- 9. Letter to Timperley, March 3, 1938 -- 10. Letter to Friends, April 12, 1938 -- 11. Letter to Mr. Hanawa, Japanese Consulate-General, May 11, 1938
Summary: Many in the West still think of World War II as starting either after Germany's attack on Poland in 1939 or the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, two years and four years, respectively, after long simmering tensions between the Chinese and the Japanese exploded into total war. To date, the infamous Nanjing Massacre of late 1938, in which the Japanese Imperial Army slaughtered and raped countless citizens of Nanjing, has been described from various Chinese, Japanese, and German perspectives. This book of firsthand testimony, mined from the archives of the Yale Divinity School library by Dr. Zhang and his colleagues, may be the most powerful of all, for here are eyewitness accounts by a remarkable group of nine men and one woman, dedicated, compassionate, articulate, and devout American missionaries who were there on ground zero, refusing to leave, and doing everything in their power to save the Chinese victims of this appalling atrocity.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode
Books Books The Anton Library of Chinese Studies General Stacks DS796.N2 E93 2001 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available Letters from M. Searle Bates, George A. Fitch, Ernest H. Forster, John G. Magee, James H. McCallum, W. Plumer Mills, Lewis S.C. Smythe, Albert N. Steward, Minnie Vautrin, and R.O. Wilson located at the Yale Divinity School Library. | "An East Gate book." | Includes index. TBC00006005

Letters from M. Searle Bates, George A. Fitch, Ernest H. Forster, John G. Magee, James H. McCallum, W. Plumer Mills, Lewis S.C. Smythe, Albert N. Steward, Minnie Vautrin, and R.O. Wilson located at the Yale Divinity School Library.

"An East Gate book."

Includes index.

Foreword / Donald MacInnis -- Introduction: Historical Background / Zhang Kaiyuan -- 1. Picture and a Biographical Sketch -- 2. Some Pictures from Nanking, December 15, 1937 -- 3. Excerpts of Letters to the Japanese Embassy, December 14-27, 1937 -- 4. Note on Aftermath of Registration at the University, December 26, 1937 -- 5. Letter to Friends, January 10, 1938 -- 6. Excerpts of Letters to Mr. Allison of the American Embassy, January 14-June 16, 1938 -- 7. Letters to Wife, February 1, 13, 1938 -- 8. Letter from Timperley, February 17, 1938 -- 9. Letter to Timperley, March 3, 1938 -- 10. Letter to Friends, April 12, 1938 -- 11. Letter to Mr. Hanawa, Japanese Consulate-General, May 11, 1938

Many in the West still think of World War II as starting either after Germany's attack on Poland in 1939 or the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, two years and four years, respectively, after long simmering tensions between the Chinese and the Japanese exploded into total war. To date, the infamous Nanjing Massacre of late 1938, in which the Japanese Imperial Army slaughtered and raped countless citizens of Nanjing, has been described from various Chinese, Japanese, and German perspectives. This book of firsthand testimony, mined from the archives of the Yale Divinity School library by Dr. Zhang and his colleagues, may be the most powerful of all, for here are eyewitness accounts by a remarkable group of nine men and one woman, dedicated, compassionate, articulate, and devout American missionaries who were there on ground zero, refusing to leave, and doing everything in their power to save the Chinese victims of this appalling atrocity.

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