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词条 Timothy Cheek
释义

  1. Education and scholarly career

  2. Contributions and interpretations

  3. Selected major works

  4. Notes

  5. References

Timothy Cheek ({{zh| t= 齊慕實| s= 齐慕实| p = Qi Mushi }}) is a Canadian historian specializing in the study of intellectuals, the history of the Chinese Communist Party, and the political system in modern China. He is Professor, Louis Cha Chair in Chinese Research and Director, Centre for Chinese Research, Institute of Asian Research,

at the University of British Columbia. From 2002-2009 he was editor of the journal Pacific Affairs Before going to University of British Columbia in 2002, he taught at The Colorado College.[1]

Education and scholarly career

After taking a B.A. in Asian Studies, with Honours, at Australian National University, in 1978, Cheek earned a Master's Degree in History, University of Virginia in 1980. In 1986 he earned a Ph.D., History and East Asian Languages, at Harvard University, under the supervision of Philip A. Kuhn.

Cheek has served on the Board of University of British Columbia Press (2010 – ), Editorial Board, Journal of the Canadian Historical Association (Ottawa), 2007— ) Editorial Board, The China Journal (Canberra), 2007— ), Editorial Board, Issues and Studies (Taipei) (2004— ), Editorial Board, Historiography East and West (Leiden/Vienna) (2003— ). Editorial Board, China Information (Leiden) (1998 – ), as well as other executive or advisory positions.[1]

Contributions and interpretations

Scholars such as Merle Goldman, with whom Cheek has collaborated, have tended to see Chinese intellectuals as dissidents or critics of the regime, while Cheek has tended to assume that the intellectuals he studies see themselves as working within the regime, broadly conceived, that is, as "establishment intellectuals." The introduction to a group of essays he edited with Carol Lee Hamrin comments that "anti-establishment intellectuals in China have less to gain and more to lose than their American counterparts", and that since all Chinese intellectuals are state employees, "by playing assigned roles as supporters of the establishment and servants of the state, they gain patriotic self-esteem, outlets for their publications, power over their peers, and opportunities for scarce commodities such as housing and travel abroad".{{sfnb|CheekHamrin|1986| p = ix-x}}

A review of his edited volume, Cambridge Companion to Mao, wrote that the essays in it "contribute to an understanding of Mao Zedong that is as messy and complex as it is compelling. The text, moreover, encourages readers to engage the problem of knowing the historical Mao, while reminding the reader of the equal importance of Mao’s ahistorical legacy. Sadly, this text will most likely never be sold in airport bookstores alongside popular biographies of Mao, but Cheek’s collection will hopefully spark lively discussion in seminar classrooms.[2]

Selected major works

  • {{cite book |last = Cheek |first = Timothy |authormask = 2 |last2 = Hamrin |first2 = Carol Lee |year = 1986 |title = China's Establishment Intellectuals |publisher = M.E. Sharpe| location = Armonk, N.Y. |isbn = 978-0873323666|ref = harv}}
  • {{cite book |last1 = Goldman |first1= Merle |first2 =Carol Lee |last2 = Hamrin |year = 1987 |title = China's Intellectuals and the State: In Search of a New Relationship |publisher = Council on East Asian Studies Distributed by the Harvard University Press| location = Cambridge, Mass. |isbn = 978-0674119727|ref = none}}
  • {{cite book |last1 = Cheek |first1 = Timothy |authormask = 2|others = Mao, Zedong, Roderick MacFarquhar, Eugene Wu, Merle Goldman and Benjamin I. Schwartz, eds. |year = 1989 |title = The Secret Speeches of Chairman Mao: From the Hundred Flowers to the Great Leap Forward |publisher = Council on East Asian Studies/Harvard University: Distributed by Harvard University Press| location = Cambridge, Mass. |isbn = 978-0674796737|ref = none}}
  • {{cite book |last = Cheek |first = Timothy |authormask = 2|others = Qing, Dai, Edited by, David E. Apter |year = 1994 |title = Wang Shiwei and "Wild Lilies" : Rectification and Purges in the Chinese Communist Party, 1942-1944 |publisher = M.E. Sharpe| location = Armonk, NY |isbn = 978-1563242564|ref = none}}
  • {{cite book |last = Cheek |first = Timothy |authormask = 2 |year = 1997 |title = Propaganda and Culture in Mao's China: Deng Tuo and the Intelligentsia |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=JBg-OS5rJXIC&lpg=PP1&pg=PR11#v= |publisher = Clarendon Press; Oxford University Press| location = Oxford England; New York |isbn = 978-0198290667|ref = none}}
  • {{cite ||last = Cheek |first = Timothy |authormask = 2 |title =Books That Help Students Unlearn |url = http://asianetwork.org/ane-archived-issues/2000-spring/anex2000-spring-cheek.pdf |journal = ASIANetwork Exchange |volume = 7 |number = 3 |year = 2000| pp = 18-20| ref = none}}
  • {{cite book |last = Cheek |first = Timothy |authormask = 2|year = 2002 |title = Mao Zedong and China's Revolutions: A Brief History with Documents |publisher = Palgrave| location = NY |isbn = 978-0312294298 |ref = none}}
  • {{cite journal |last =Cheek Timothy |authormask = 2|title =Mao and China in World History High School Textbooks |journal = Education About Asia |volume =10 |issue = 2 |pages =19–20 |date =2005 |jstor = |issn = |doi = |accessdate = |ref= none}}
  • {{cite journal |last =Cheek |first = Timothy |authormask = 2|title =The New Number One Counter-Revolutionary inside the Party: Academic Biography as Mass Criticism |journal =The China Journal |volume =55 |issue = |pages =109–118 |date =2006 |language = |url = |jstor = 20066122|issn = |doi = 10.2307/20066122|accessdate = |ref= none}}
  • {{cite book |last = Cheek|first = Timothy |authormask = 2 |year = 2010 |title = A Critical Introduction to Mao |publisher = Cambridge University Press| location = New York|url=http://assets.cambridge.org/97805218/84624/cover/9780521884624.jpg |isbn = 9780521884624|ref = none}}
  • {{cite | title = Mao and Maoism |first = Timothy |last = Cheek |authormask = 2| series = The Oxford Handbook of the History of Communism (Oxford Handbooks Online)| publisher = Oxford University Press| url = http://www.oxfordhandbooks.com/view/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199602056.001.0001/oxfordhb-9780199602056-e-041 | year = 2014| ref = none}}
  • {{cite journal |last1 = Cheek |first1 = Timothy |authormask = 2 |authorlink = |title = Of Leaders and Governance: How the Chinese Dragon Got Its Scales |journal =Crosscurrents |volume =2 |issue = |pages =|date =2012 |language = |url = https://cross-currents.berkeley.edu/sites/default/files/e-journal/articles/final_cheek_0.pdf |jstor = |issn = |doi = |accessdate = |ref= none}}
  • {{cite journal |last1 = Cheek |first1 = Timothy |authormask = 2 |title =The Importance of Revolution as an Historical Topic |journal =Journal of Modern Chinese History |volume =7 |issue = 2 |pages =250–253 |date =2013 |language = |jstor = |issn = |doi = 10.1080/17535654.2013.850865 |ref= none}}
  • {{cite book |last1 = Cheek |first1 = Timothy |authormask = 2 |year = 2015 |title = The Intellectual in Modern Chinese History |publisher = Cambridge University Press| location = Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, New York |isbn = 9781107021419 |ref = none}}

Notes

1. ^Curriculum Vitae Institute of Asian Research, University of British Columbia.
2. ^{{cite| first = Brian |last = DeMare|title = (Review) Cambridge Companion to Mao| journal = China Beat| date = 2011| url = http://www.thechinabeat.org/?p=3378}}

References

  • Faculty Profile Institute of Asian Research, University of British Columbia.
{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Cheek, Timothy}}

9 : Canadian sinologists|Harvard University alumni|University of British Columbia faculty|Colorado College faculty|Australian National University alumni|Canadian historians|Social historians|Living people|Year of birth missing (living people)

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