The Peace Conspiracy: Wang Ching-Wei and the China War, 1937-1941

The Peace Conspiracy: Wang Ching-Wei and the China War, 1937-1941

Gerald Bunker
Role: Author
This volume is featured in the distinguished Harvard East Asian Series.

Shots fired in the dawning hours of July 7, 1937, on the outskirts of Peking touched off eight years of war between Japan and China, a war which ended with revolution in China and near-Armageddon in Japan. In this carefully researched and colorfully written study, Gerald Bunker unravels the tangled story of Wang Ching-wei, disciple of Sun Yat-sen, colleague and rival of Chiang Kai-shek, who sacrificed his life and reputation in a vain attempt to stop the war. Based on primary sources and interviews with participants, it explores in depth and detail the motivations of Wang and his colleagues – reflecting thus the nature of politics in Kuomintang China – and the equally complex motivations of their Japanese fellow-conspirators.