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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Zi_ZhongyunZi Zhongyun - Wikipedia

    Spouse. Chen Lemin. Relatives. Zi Yaohua (father) Tong Yijun (mother) Zi Zhongyun ( simplified Chinese: 资中筠; traditional Chinese: 資中筠; pinyin: Zī Zhōngyún; born June 1930) is a Chinese translator and historian who is an expert on US studies with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. [1] She is proficient in English and French.

  2. Zi Zhongyun is veteran practitioner of public diplomacy, interpreter for top PRC leaders, specialist and author in international politics and China-U.S. relations, essayist and director of The Institute of American Studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. Books Zi, Zhongyun.

  3. Jun 1, 2005 · Zi does not argue that U.S.-China conflict was ordained. Rather, she tries to understand, in her words, “the different political forces that pulled American policies in different directions” and to show that the final result was the work of all the elements involved, including the “wisdom or lack of wisdom of the key decision makers” (pp. xvii-xviii).

  4. Jun 18, 2021 · Zi, who once served as Mao’s interpreter, also noted that China had much to learn from the U.S., particularly in the fields of education, medical care and elderly care. “If American-style hospitals flourished in China, China’s blood-sucking medical model would be banished,” and “If American-style education took root in China, Chinese students need not go abroad to enjoy advanced ...

  5. Mar 27, 2021 · Editor’s note: Zi Zhongyun (资中筠) is a historian and an expert on U.S. studies with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. In a memoir published at her 90th birthday in 2019, Zi recounted her eventful life in one of the moments of most rapid change in China’s history.

  6. Apr 27, 2007 · Zi Zhongyun is Senior Fellow and former Director of the Institute of American Studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, and Editor‐in‐Chief of Meiguo Yanjiu (Journal of American Studies in China).

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  8. Zi Zhongyun's historical account, relying heavily on the State Department's Foreign Relations of the United States, but also on Chinese archival sources, begins with the final months of President Roosevelt's life, when Roosevelt's China policy was to aid the government of Chiang Kai-shek so as to keep it in the war against

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