The Lost Chance in China and the Rise of Cold War Populism

Author:   Stephen J. Hartnett
Publisher:   Michigan State University Press
ISBN:  

9781611865615


Pages:   412
Publication Date:   01 October 2025
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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The Lost Chance in China and the Rise of Cold War Populism


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Full Product Details

Author:   Stephen J. Hartnett
Publisher:   Michigan State University Press
Imprint:   Michigan State University Press
ISBN:  

9781611865615


ISBN 10:   1611865611
Pages:   412
Publication Date:   01 October 2025
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

“The Lost Chance in China and the Rise of Cold War Populism is a lively, stimulating, thorough, and thoughtful contribution to the history of foreign relations, diplomacy, and the advent of the Cold War, but it’s also an important encapsulation of what a rhetorical perspective can often offer to more conventional history. Stephen Hartnett is at heart a grand storyteller, and he sifts through countless memos, telegrams, editorials, dispatches, and government reports to offer a rollicking read with well-drawn mid-20th century characters (from journalists and popular commentators to mid-level diplomats, legislators, and defense operatives) in an almost breathless narrative. His work is devastatingly effective in demonstrating how communication was the driving force behind the unfolding arc of the “tragedy” of U.S./China relations.”—Timothy Barney, author of Mapping the Cold War: Cartography and the Framing of America’s International Power “When a distinguished scholar of rhetoric and communication goes into the archives of Washington and China in the 1940s, nothing short of a dazzling history of Cold War McCarthyite populism results. This erudite book is as important to history, China studies, and international relations as it is to media and communication scholars. The lessons of the past it meticulously untangles offer sobering warnings to the present.”—Guobin Yang, Grace Lee Boggs Professor of Communication and Sociology at the Annenberg School for Communication and Department of Sociology at the University of Pennsylvania


Author Information

Stephen J. Hartnett is a professor in the Department of Communication at the University of Colorado Denver. He is the director of the UCD College-in-Prison Program, served as the 2017 president of the National Communication Association, and is the editor of Captured Words/Free Thoughts, the annual arts and politics magazine. He has published ten books, including A World of Turmoil: The United States, China, and Taiwan in the Long Cold War (2021) and the coedited Imagining China: Rhetorics of Nationalism in an Age of Globalization (2017). His scholarship on international affairs has appeared in Presidential Studies Quarterly, the International Journal of Communication, Rhetoric & Public Affairs, the Taiwan Journal of Democracy, the Journal of International and Intercultural Communication, and the Quarterly Journal of Speech. His journalism on U.S.-China-Taiwan relations has appeared in SupChina, Public Seminar, New Lines Magazine, and Communication Currents. He has served since 2016 as one of co-organizers for five conferences in Beijing, one in Shenzhen, one in Hong Kong, and one online conference in Shanghai (during covid). He has been awarded the Kohrs-Campbell Prize in Rhetorical Criticism, the James A. Winans-Herbert A. Wichelns Memorial Award for Distinguished Scholarship in Rhetoric and Public Address, the Association for Chinese Communication Studies’ Xiao Award for Outstanding Rhetorical Research, and the University of Colorado’s Thomas Jefferson Award.

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