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Urban Mass Movement: The May Thirtieth Movement in Shanghai
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 November 2008
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The May Thirtieth Incident which occurred in Shanghai during 1925 has been regarded by the Chinese as one of the most important events in modern Chinese history, and the incident has been called ‘Wu-san Ch'an-an’ (the May 30th Tragedy) ever since 1925. Yet only a few studies in the Western languages deal with such an important event. Among those few studies, two of them concentrate on the role of labor in the movement, and the other after collecting a lot of source materials decides to add a subtitle, ‘an outline’, to recognize the vastness and complexity of the subject without making much effort to analyze or discuss the movement.
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References
This is a revised version of the paper presented to the Seventh Conference, International Association of Historians of Asia in Bangkok, Thailand in 1977.
The author wishes to thank Professors Hao Chang and Samuel Chu of the Ohio State University, Dr Chen-tung Chang of the University of Singapore, Professor Victor Funnell of Hull University, and Dr Wen-hsiung Hsu of the Northwestern University for their comments on the preliminary version of this paper.
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41 Chang Kuo-t'ao may have mis-spelt Yün T'ai-ying as Fang T'ai-ying.Google Scholar
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62 NCH, June 13, 1925.
63 ibid.
64 NCH, June 6, 1925.
65 NCH, June 13, 20, 1925: China Year Book, 1926, p. 1005.
66 NCH, June 13, 1925.
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79 NCH, June 27, 1925.
80 Chao-chun, Ma, Chung-kuo lao-kung yun-tung-shih, p. 384.Google Scholar
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82 NCH, July 11, 1925.
83 NCH, July 11, 18, 1925.
84 NCH, July 11, 1925.
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90 Out of the total of eighty-three persons, fifty-three were students.
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