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The Fall and Rise of China
- Narrated by: Richard Baum
- Length: 24 hrs and 8 mins
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Publisher's summary
How can we account for China’s momentous - and almost wholly unanticipated - global rise? And what does it mean, for us in the West and for humanity’s future?
Speaking to these vital and fascinating questions, these 48 penetrating lectures by Professor Baum bring to vivid life the human struggles, the titanic political upheavals, and the spectacular speed of China’s modern rebirth. Offering multilevel insight into one of the most astounding real-life dramas of modern history, the lectures weave together the richly diverse developments and sociopolitical currents that created the China you now read about in the headlines.
You’ll get a detailed understanding of all the core events in China’s century of stunning change, including the collapse of the Qing dynasty, the Republican era and civil wars, the "Great Leap Forward", the Cultural Revolution, and the post-Mao economic "miracle". Throughout, Professor Baum reveals highly unusual details that enrich the cinematic sweep of the story. For example, you’ll learn about the Christian warlord who baptized his troops with a fire hose, the strange kidnapping of Chiang K’ai-shek, and Professor Baum’s own smuggling of top-secret documents out of Taiwan.
A core strength of these lectures is that they make sense of the dramatic events of the story by getting deeply at what underlay them, culturally, socially, and historically - leaving you with a nuanced knowledge of the forces moving China’s modern emergence. Bringing alive the passionate reinvention of China with deep discernment and humanity, they portray the confounding, majestic, heart-rending, and visionary story of a modern giant.
PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying reference material will be available in your Library section along with the audio.
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Prosecuting attorney in the Manson trial Vincent Bugliosi held a unique insider's position in one of the most baffling and horrifying cases of the 20th century: the cold-blooded Tate-LaBianca murders carried out by Charles Manson and four of his followers. What motivated Manson in his seemingly mindless selection of victims, and what was his hold over the young women who obeyed his orders? Now available for the first time in unabridged audio, the gripping story of this famous and haunting crime is brought to life by acclaimed narrator Scott Brick.
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When three-month-old Lia Lee arrived at the county hospital emergency room in Merced, California, a chain of events was set in motion from which neither she nor her parents nor her doctors would ever recover. Lia's parents, Foua and Nao Kao, were part of a large Hmong community in Merced, refugees from the CIA-run "Quiet War" in Laos.
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Good audiobook but narrator struggles with basic pronunciation
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By: Anne Fadiman
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What listeners say about The Fall and Rise of China
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Yu-Chin
- 12-15-13
Offers excellent objective perspective!
What did you love best about The Fall and Rise of China?
Objective perspective of the events and captured the essense of leader's characteristics.
What does Professor Richard Baum bring to the story that you wouldn’t experience if you just read the book?
The tone used to describe the events and his personal encounters which would not be conveyed through text alone.
Any additional comments?
As a Taiwan-borne Chinese, it was interesting to contrast the objective narrative of the last 100 years or so history with what I had learnt in Taiwan during childhood. Great to learn aspect of China that was foreign to me before taking this course. I was pleasantly surprised by the depth of understanding of not just the historical events, but the Chinese psyche during those times. Highly recommend it! (I've already recommended this to friends and family)
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77 people found this helpful
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- Tommy D'Angelo
- 12-20-16
Mixed Impression
Would you try another book from The Great Courses and/or Professor Richard Baum?
I have a mixed impression of this course. It had periods of extremely gripping lectures leading you to want more (the first 20 or so were very well done---four or five star quality). But then there were also many lectures that failed to capture my engagement and I found myself in zoning out mode (latter half of the course). This is the only real negative I can come up with but it is interesting that he could go from thrilling to listen to in one lecture to uninteresting and "hard to get through" in another lecture.
The length of the course may have contributed to the gradual decline. A 30-36 lecture course would seem a perfect length to me. 48 courses to study 150-200 years of history (or for that matter 42 lectures to cover 100 years) just seems too much and leads to many lectures feeling way too micro-level.
I do like the fact that the Professor split the lectures into distinct periods of years and used the timeframes in the lecture titles so you know what the boundaries are vs. the non-linear approach other history professors sometimes take in which timeframes bleed over into other lectures and you're left feeling like you are traveling back and forth in time.
I also liked the personal stories the professor sprinkled in to the historical narrative from his numerous trips to China. For the most part they were not overdone or tangential. He used them to provide true real life examples to illustrate certain points (such as his exposure to the first entrepreneurs in the 1980's or his experience in which an older woman berated a countryman for speaking to Professor Baum---a foreigner). And they brought history to life.
Lectures well worth my time: 2-3, 7-13, 15-16, 18-19, 25-26, 33, 43-44, 47-48
His closing lecture was excellent and thought-provoking: the question is not whether China will rise to world power status but whether China will be a force for peace or for conflict. His advice on how the United States should respond was intriguing: take an accepting stance---almost nurturing, and be willing to share the global scene vs. resistance to China's inevitable rise. And for those of you concerned of a belligerent Chinese military, this keeps sticking in my head: China is just as wary of our intentions towards them as we are towards them. It is an interesting dance of a cautious friendship but remember that the two countries are bound to one another economically so much so that it is in neither's best interest to see the other fail.
Prior to buying this course I had listened to "Foundations of Eastern Civilization" as well as "Great Minds of the Eastern Intellect Tradition" and was exposed to quite alot of Chinese history. But when I found this course I was interested in another professor's perspective, especially one who is obviously very passionate about Chinese society and its people. Notwithstanding the length of the course, I am glad I gave it a chance since my knowledge of recent Chinese history was deepened and led to a much better understanding of how China became the society it is today.
If your curiosity falls in the range of how the Manchu dynasty fell, how the Communist party came to power, consolidated power, and has ruled the country up until the present day then this course will do you well. If you are looking more for a "big history" view of Chinese history and society I would recommend "Foundations of Eastern Civilization". If you are more interested in the great philosophies of the region, then reach for "Great Minds of the Eastern Intellect Tradition".
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- Patrick
- 09-27-16
CCP Lapdog
I've lived in China 10+ years. Like the author, I can speak, read and write Chinese. My wife is Chinese and my children half Chinese. I read the positive reviews and I can only think that most people don't know much about China or the 20th century.
The lectures are extremely biased. Like a good little boy wearing the blue jumpsuit, he refrains from mentioning Tibet, yet boasts how the modern China isn't aggressive. War is peace apparently. He at least recognizes the aggression intended for Taiwan although he claims an American carrier group is a single very small boat. To the listener with a strong knowledge of history, this garbage is all over the book. He mentions everything bad done to China but nothing bad that China does. He loves to minimize the west and play up the east.
He even calls the national Chinese soldiers in ww2 poor troops. They weren't. Chiang wasn't a good general. He would commit his forces piecemeal rather than in force. If you know anything about war you'll know this is bad as the enemy will be able to concentrate his entire force against parts of yours. Anyway, this was a sad line to hear anyone say as I thought they fought bravely.
His information about the Korean War, especially the causes of war and Mao and Stalin's role in it, are wrong as what he says is directly contradicted by the documents declassified by the kgb in the 90s. He even contradicts common knowledge. Mao agreed to actively fight the UN in North Korea if the invasion failed. It's like the professor was educated in China and told the twisted history people learn here: the USA is at fault for everything and China did nothing. War is peace remember.
His forecast for the future has been wrong as China devalued its currency yet again (he forecasts China stopping this). Pirating hasn't ceased. I live here, I know. Pollution isn't going down. Don't believe what you read in the paper. One thing most people don't realize is that over here, not just in China, but all over Asia simply lying about something is common because it saves face.
He cites a modern case where the USA and Saudi searched a Chinese boat traveling from North Korea to Iran and didn't find any weapons as a bad thing. Chinese boats keep the government trash of North Korea happy with luxuries and other things the UN has banned. Furthermore Iran and North Korea do do business in weapons. Actually, North Korea would have collapsed long ago if it didn't border China. The professor banks on your ignorance to make his arguments as any boat going from North Korea to Iran should be searched. I wouldn't be surprised if it was a decoy set up to create a situation for people like Baum to tell us about. Stuff like this is everywhere in the series.
Worst of all is the whole 3 or 4 sentences he says about Falun Gong. research this yourself and compare it to what he says. I'm in China so I'm going to not talk about this here. I don't understand how someone can put their career, as Baum is clearly doing here, before human rights.
He talks of China as if things are improving. It's not. if you think the USA is racist, try living in China. If you think the law isn't fair and applied to all equally in the USA, try living in China. If you think the USA is corrupt, come here. While we try to stamp these thing out, nothing here is done about them. What you read in the news is for show.
I found most of this series disgusting. I suppose if you don't know better, it might give you hope; however it is false hope. I don't have hope. I've watched things get worse here. I'm not sure the Mao and the cpp actually made China worse, and I obviously hope things do get better as I'm stuck here, but these lectures bothered me.
He is a good speaker and the story he tells is interesting, just don't get sucked into believing there isn't another side to the stories he's telling you. Don't get fooled by his jokes and disdain for Mao either as Mao isn't treated like a god here; it's understood he made mistakes and kind of lost his mind later in life. If you're trying to learn the history of China and the 20th century, fact check everything you hear. I'm relieved he resigned from the (hopefully) president cliton's Asia advisory team.
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- Alan Rither
- 03-27-14
Best of the Great Courses - Top 10 of all
What did you love best about The Fall and Rise of China?
Professor Baum's encyclopedic knowledge of the subject and his personal love for the culture and the people.
Who was your favorite character and why?
The embalmed remains of Chairman Mao looking green from too much formaldehyde. It was an insight 'behind the curtain,' so to speak, that one would never read in a serious work about China but that revealed the humor behind the god-man's image.
Have you listened to any of Professor Richard Baum’s other performances before? How does this one compare?
This is his only audiobook that I know of and he died in 2012 from cancer that he thought was gone when he recorded these lectures.
Was this a book you wanted to listen to all in one sitting?
It is far too long and complicated to listen to it in one sitting, but I wanted to get back into the car where I keep my player and sometimes went on extended drives to avoid turning off a lecture in the middle.
Any additional comments?
The world has lost a great scholar and a generous human. I can only hope that his lectures in this Great Courses audiobook will inspire a new generation of people to learn more about China as the 'Sleeping Giant' takes a leading role on the world stage in this century.
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- Tim S.
- 05-26-17
Style Over Clarity
What did you like best about The Fall and Rise of China? What did you like least?
This is slightly worse than a middle of the road audio lecture. First let me say that you can absolutely tell that the Professor is intelligent, supremely knowledgeable in his highly interesting field of study, and he's put a great deal of effort into the content of his script.
So why is it a two-star-mediocre audio lecture? Because listening to this lecture is like listening to an academic paper the Professor wrote and then edited to come off more "interesting" to a lay-audience.
See if there is anything strange about this sentence: This audio lecture course employs a copious and wide-range of flowery verbiage--in the form of colorful adverbs, adjectives, verbs, and nouns--selected and sewn together with aplomb, but which ultimately tend to obfuscate the lecturer's underlying thesis from even the most attentive of listeners. Do you like sentences like that? If so and you can bare 20 hours of them being read out loud, maybe you won't mind this course. But in my personal experience as an attorney, I know that there is a big difference between effective academic writing and effective oral story telling. You can't shoehorn a written essay, even one written for a lay audience, into an oral lecture and expect it to be excellent. This is particularly true when all of the key persons and places to the story are in another language--Chinese. That tactics used to make writing colorful and interesting (varying sentence structure, diverse use of adjectives, verbs, and nouns, alliteration) often don't translate well to a good, and more importantly CLEAR, lecture. The language is stilted and the author comes off as trying to hard to make the lecture interesting through the use of interesting language, similes, metaphors, and Chinese translations. But these things tend to get in the way of what is really interesting--the facts. Often, though not always, the core facts of each chapter need to be untangled from the lecturer's presentation.
Here's an example that took me two minutes of listening to a random section to pull (around the 25-minute mark of Chapter 2):
"This remarkable imperial edict with its veiled threat, written shortly before the close of the 18th century, at a time when Chinese imperial potency was already beginning to fray around the edges, was in many ways emblematic of Chinese famous 'middle kingdom complex' a constellation of attitudes marked by extreme cultural self-satisfaction, economic insularity, military complacency, and above all, a xenophobic contempt for all things barbarian i.e. foreign--the two terms were used virtually interchangeably in late imperial China."
I understand every word in the above sentence. I understand every idea in it too. And while it's a fine sentence for an academic essay, it's a tedious sentence. And it's an awful sentence for a lecture because, when surrounded with a bunch of other overly long and complex sentences, ideas, names, locations, it induces extreme listening fatigue. Imagine trying to keep up with that sentence and, on top of it, figure out all of the jargon that this lecture on Chinese history necessarily brings. It doesn't let up and its clearly a product of the author not boiling his content down enough.
I'd stay away from this one unless you really are looking to burn your audible credits.
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26 people found this helpful
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- Raithea
- 07-22-13
Excellent course on modern Chinese History
This course offers a fairly in depth history lesson for the last century in China. It starts out with a summation of the previous events, ideas and principles that led up to the collapse of the dynastic system. The author provides analysis of the events by referring to other historical references. During the more modern era the author is able to add in his own experiences to give the listener a more personal look at the daily realities of the Chinese today. Though there was less of an analysis on the financial history then I would have hoped for, particularly the financial practices of several groups in modern day China. I will admit this is simply my own preference and likely not a notable deficit for most listeners.
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18 people found this helpful
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- D. Millar
- 01-30-14
Like everybody says. Excellent.
Where does The Fall and Rise of China rank among all the audiobooks you’ve listened to so far?
Very high. I am a scholar on the subject and even I find some of the minutia of Chinese Communist history tedious. Yet Richard Baum makes it so compelling that I think even the non-expert will find it enjoying-- all 16 hours of it.
What does Professor Richard Baum bring to the story that you wouldn’t experience if you just read the book?
His personal anecdote about his own role in discovering the split between Mao Zedong and his top lieutenants (Deng Xiaoping and Liu Xiaoqi) was excellent. Also, thank god you have someone who can pronounce Chinese!
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17 people found this helpful
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- Kirk
- 12-30-13
Must listen to this!!!
Would you consider the audio edition of The Fall and Rise of China to be better than the print version?
This audio version of The Fall and Rise of China is very interesting and Professor Baum is so excited about his subject matter, he makes it entertaining! His passion transfers to the listener! I will probably listen to it a second time!
What did you like best about this story?
I am around a lot of Chinese people so I wanted to learn about their country so I downloaded this course and I was so surprised at how interesting China's History is and the professor is fabulous! Highly recommended! It was so interesting how he got his material for his Ph.D. dissertation. Amazing story! Listen to find out!
Which scene was your favorite?
Some of the situations that occurred while he was in China were my favorite. He was able to witness history in the making.
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15 people found this helpful
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- Kelly
- 11-22-13
Gripping!
What made the experience of listening to The Fall and Rise of China the most enjoyable?
This was just great story telling by a true enthusiast and expert.
Any additional comments?
I was sad when it ended.
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13 people found this helpful
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- owen
- 06-01-15
Masterpiece, just finished it, and starting it again
Richard Baum is incredible. An engaging 40+ hr history audible book is no simple task. Couldn't stop listening. I just moved to China, running a consumer business. Anyone living or working in China should listen to this. Couldn't imagine not having this context. My Chinese customers appreciate my knowledge of Chinese history, and my interest in key historical players and events.
If I had six stars to give I would do it in a heartbeat.
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11 people found this helpful