Description

Book Synopsis
This book is about Zhejiang University, one of the oldest and most prestigious universities in China, which was forced to evacuate from the Hangzhou when the Japanese arrived in 1937 and began torturing civilians, raping women, bombing towns, burning farms, and destroying factories, homes, schools, and libraries. The faculty, staff, and students fled to a succession of towns where they sought refuge from the war and set up temporary classrooms to continue with their educational mission. This exodus lasted eight years and spanned over a thousand miles. They faced constant fear and worry due to malnutrition, disease, abject poverty, and enemy air strikes. But with the resilience and spirit of its faculty and students, the University survived to help revitalize a devastated nation.

Trade Review
This book offers a fine specimen of non-fiction that runs the gamut: it is very appealing and readable as a personal memoir, it is enthralling and memorable as a historical tract, and it is intriguing and informative as an institutional archival piece. The stage of history is here fitted out with life-or-death moments, war-torn landscapes and characters with unique, touching and believable human traits... -- Xinman Liu, Assistant Professor of Chinese Literature, University of Pittsburgh
As Zhejiang University students, my classmate Chiao-min and I spent our college years with an extraordinary group of professors and classmates with whom we bonded as we received an education made all the more extraordinary by those difficult times. Along with our wives, fellow students on the journey at the tie, we witnessed the ravages of war while traveling to the interior of China. Yet we were filled youthful ambition, steadfast in our resolve to continue our studies, and our energy and enthusiasm never flagged. This account by Jean and Chiao-min captures those years vividly and demonstrates why we, along with alumni worldwide, continue to regard Zhejiang University with great loyalty and admiration. -- Ying Shi-lin, Former Chancellor of Zhejiang University
During China's Anti-Japanese War between 1937 and 1945, the arduous movement of government, universities, and other institutions from coastal areas to safer inland redoubts is a tale not only of hardship but also of courage, devotion, fortitude, and patriotism. In this book, Chiao-min Hsieh and Jean Kan Hsieh, as participants in this great trek, have successfully given voice to many fellow students and professors as well as folks encountered on their travels...This is a compelling story told with clarity, honesty, and insight, as well as occasional humor. -- Ronald G. Knapp, SUNY Distinguished Professor Emeritus

Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Racing Ahead, The Time Before the War Chapter 2: The Japanese Invasion Chapter 3: The Desperate Migration of Zhejiang University Chapter 4: After the War Chapter 5: Conclusion Chapter 6: A Sample of Oustanding Faculty Members during the War of Resistance

Race the Rising Sun

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Fri 19 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback by Chiao-Min Hsieh, Jean Kan Hsieh

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      View other formats and editions of Race the Rising Sun by Chiao-Min Hsieh

      Publisher: Hamilton Books
      Publication Date: 5/16/2009 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780761841487, 978-0761841487
      ISBN10: 0761841482

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This book is about Zhejiang University, one of the oldest and most prestigious universities in China, which was forced to evacuate from the Hangzhou when the Japanese arrived in 1937 and began torturing civilians, raping women, bombing towns, burning farms, and destroying factories, homes, schools, and libraries. The faculty, staff, and students fled to a succession of towns where they sought refuge from the war and set up temporary classrooms to continue with their educational mission. This exodus lasted eight years and spanned over a thousand miles. They faced constant fear and worry due to malnutrition, disease, abject poverty, and enemy air strikes. But with the resilience and spirit of its faculty and students, the University survived to help revitalize a devastated nation.

      Trade Review
      This book offers a fine specimen of non-fiction that runs the gamut: it is very appealing and readable as a personal memoir, it is enthralling and memorable as a historical tract, and it is intriguing and informative as an institutional archival piece. The stage of history is here fitted out with life-or-death moments, war-torn landscapes and characters with unique, touching and believable human traits... -- Xinman Liu, Assistant Professor of Chinese Literature, University of Pittsburgh
      As Zhejiang University students, my classmate Chiao-min and I spent our college years with an extraordinary group of professors and classmates with whom we bonded as we received an education made all the more extraordinary by those difficult times. Along with our wives, fellow students on the journey at the tie, we witnessed the ravages of war while traveling to the interior of China. Yet we were filled youthful ambition, steadfast in our resolve to continue our studies, and our energy and enthusiasm never flagged. This account by Jean and Chiao-min captures those years vividly and demonstrates why we, along with alumni worldwide, continue to regard Zhejiang University with great loyalty and admiration. -- Ying Shi-lin, Former Chancellor of Zhejiang University
      During China's Anti-Japanese War between 1937 and 1945, the arduous movement of government, universities, and other institutions from coastal areas to safer inland redoubts is a tale not only of hardship but also of courage, devotion, fortitude, and patriotism. In this book, Chiao-min Hsieh and Jean Kan Hsieh, as participants in this great trek, have successfully given voice to many fellow students and professors as well as folks encountered on their travels...This is a compelling story told with clarity, honesty, and insight, as well as occasional humor. -- Ronald G. Knapp, SUNY Distinguished Professor Emeritus

      Table of Contents
      Chapter 1: Racing Ahead, The Time Before the War Chapter 2: The Japanese Invasion Chapter 3: The Desperate Migration of Zhejiang University Chapter 4: After the War Chapter 5: Conclusion Chapter 6: A Sample of Oustanding Faculty Members during the War of Resistance

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