Yang Jisheng was born in 1940, joined the Chinese Communist Party in 1964, and worked for the Xinhua News Agency from January 1968 until his retirement in 2001. For fifteen years, he was a deputy editor at Yanhuang Chunqiu (Chronicles of History), an official journal that regularly skirted censorship with articles on controversial political topics. In 2015, he resigned under official pressure. For his groundbreaking work Tombstone, Yang won Sweden's Stieg Larsson Prize for journalistic courage in 2015, and the Louis M. Lyons Award for Conscience and Integrity in Journalism, presented by the Nieman Fellows at Harvard University, in 2016. Tombstone also won the Manhattan Institute's 2013 Hayek Book Prize and the 2013 Lemkin Book Award from the Institute for the Study of Genocide. Yang Jisheng lives in Beijing with his wife and two children.
Stacy Mosher learned Chinese in Hong Kong, where she lived for more than seventeen years. A longtime journalist, Mosher currently works as a translator and editor in Brooklyn, New York.
Guo Jian is a professor of English at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater. Originally trained in the Chinese language and literature, Guo was on the Chinese faculty of Beijing Normal University until he came to the United States to study for his Ph.D. in English in the mid-1980s.
"Monumental . . . Yang now brings his reputation as one of China's
most daring historical writers to another open wound in modern
Chinese history, the Cultural Revolution . . . The World Turned
Upside Down is a formidable work of research and analysis, and
Stacy Mosher and Guo Jian's lucid translation is a major
achievement . . . Read this book to be reminded about one of
China's darkest periods, and to mourn that so much of its modern
history is still, ironically and tragically, told outside the
country's own borders."
--Rana Mitter, Financial Times
"Rather than being chastened, Yang has done it again . . . Yang's
book has no heroes, only swarms of combatants engaged in a
"repetitive process in which the different sides took turns
enjoying the upper hand and losing power, being honored and
imprisoned, and purging and being purged"--an inevitable cycle, he
believes, in a totalitarian system. Yang . . . benefited from the
recent work of other undaunted chroniclers, whom he credits for
many chilling new details about how the violence in Beijing spread
to the countryside."
--Barbara Demick, The Atlantic "A potent and sprawling history of
the Cultural Revolution, a little-understood and catastrophic
decade in modern Chinese history . . . Essential . . . [The World
Turned Upside Down] belongs alongside The Gulag Archipelago as a
denunciation of tyranny."
--Kirkus Reviews
"Fanatical ideology, cut-throat intrigue and vast bloodshed roil
China in this sweeping history of the Cultural Revolution . . .
This exhaustive and sometimes horrifying account demonstrates how
deranged governments become when unconstrained by democracy and
individual rights."
--Publishers Weekly "Yang's book offers the most comprehensive
journalistic account yet of contemporary China's foundational
trauma. . . [he] describes, in often overwhelming detail, the
intricate internal power struggle that eventually erupted into the
Cultural Revolution."
--Pankaj Mishra, The New Yorker
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