James's Reviews > The Generalissimo: Chiang Kai-shek and the Struggle for Modern China

The Generalissimo by Jay Taylor
Rate this book
Clear rating

by
17330988
's review

really liked it
bookshelves: china, non-fiction, autobiography-biography, politics, 20th-century, asian-history

Chiang Kai-Shek (also Jiang Jieshi) was one of the most polarising Chinese figures of the twentieth century, equally celebrated as the victor over the Japanese and reviled as the man who lost the Mainland to the Communists after defeat in the Chinese Civil War.

Taylor's new, revisionary biography attempts to rehabilitate the man behind the superlatives and portray Chiang as a more nuanced and humanised figure: for example in discussing his conversion to Christianity after his marriage to Soong Mayling (Song Meiling). Drawing on numerous newly-available Chinese sources from the National Archives in Taiwan including Chiang's personal diaries, Taylor provides a much more detailed and personal biography of Chiang.

Of particular note is the post-war history that Taylor narrates: the founding of a modern, renewed Republic of China on Taiwan, the intricacies of Cold War politics and how deeply betrayed Chiang and those on Taiwan felt as America, particularly, recognised the PRC in lieu of the ROC.

Unlike previous biographies that categorically castigate Chiang for losing China owing to his own ineptitude, Taylor's biography takes a long view of history and proposes that the modern society and economy on Taiwan that arose as a result of both Chiang Kai-Shek and his son, Chiang Ching-kuo's rule as more in line with Sun Yat-sen's vision of China as opposed to the Communist rule on the Mainland.

This biography is a welcome addition to scholarship on Modern Chinese history and politics, and a welcome change, too, to the scholarly treatment of Chiang himself. A better knowledge not only of China's twentieth-century history but also of its future is given on reading this.
1 like · flag

Sign into Goodreads to see if any of your friends have read The Generalissimo.
Sign In »

Reading Progress

Started Reading
January 1, 2010 – Finished Reading
February 10, 2013 – Shelved as: china
February 10, 2013 – Shelved
July 11, 2013 – Shelved as: non-fiction
June 17, 2014 – Shelved as: autobiography-biography
August 11, 2014 – Shelved as: politics
May 9, 2022 – Shelved as: 20th-century
January 10, 2024 – Shelved as: asian-history

No comments have been added yet.