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  • Cambridge University Press  (601)
  • 1960-1964  (601)
  • 1960  (601)
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    The @China quarterly 4 (1960), S. 17-27 
    ISSN: 0305-7410
    Source: Cambridge Journals Digital Archives
    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
    Notes: In terms of his impact on the young intelligentsia of China, particularly in the 1930s, and of the emotional symbolism as patriot and reformer with which his name is charged, Lu Hsün (1881–1936) was the most powerful figure in modern Chinese letters. For the last seven years of his life he was openly identified with Communist-led left-wing cultural movements in China. Today he is honoured by the Chinese Communist Party as the great cultural hero of the Chinese Revolution. His homes have become museums, jiis tomb a shrine. He is presented as a Communist in everything but name.
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  • 2
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    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    The @China quarterly 4 (1960), S. 40-54 
    ISSN: 0305-7410
    Source: Cambridge Journals Digital Archives
    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
    Notes: The fact that Liu Shao-ch'i, Chairman of the Chinese People's Republic, since last October has accepted a series of invitations to visit the Eastern European satellites “at an appropriate time” is one indication of Peking's growing interest in developing her relations with these countries. The now fairly close relationships between China and the Eastern European satellites are a rather new dimension in Communist China's foreign policy posture and represent a radical break with China's traditional non-involvement in European affairs. Geographical remoteness, the inability to communicate, lack of interest, and preoccupation with the problems of her more immediate surroundings effectively isolated China from involvement in European affairs until very recent times. It is true that traders intermittently journeyed between China and European trade centres, carrying on a limited exchange of goods, but these exchanges had only a very marginal significance. Western imperialist encroachment upon China in recent centuries, particularly the nineteenth, finally brought to China an awareness of the principal powers of Western Europe, such as Portugal, Spain, England, the Netherlands, Imperial Germany, France, Italy, and Austria-Hungary. Much against her will China was eventually forced into unequal “treaty relations” with these European powers, as well as with Japan, Russia, and the United States of America. However China's political, commercial, and cultural relations with the nations now known as the “East European satellites” were virtually non-existent until 1949. The reasons for this lag lie in obvious historical, political, and developmental factors. When the Chinese door was kicked open in the fifth decade of the nineteenth century the East European nations either were not at the time independent or simply did not exist (East Germany, Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia) as national entities as yet. Even had they existed, it is doubtful whether they would have been in a position to participate in the scramble for trade advantage, concessions, and souls characteristic of the “treaty powers.”
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  • 3
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    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    The @China quarterly 4 (1960), S. 127-140 
    ISSN: 0305-7410
    Source: Cambridge Journals Digital Archives
    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
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  • 4
    ISSN: 0305-7410
    Source: Cambridge Journals Digital Archives
    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
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  • 5
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    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    The @China quarterly 2 (1960), S. 35-42 
    ISSN: 0305-7410
    Source: Cambridge Journals Digital Archives
    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
    Notes: The following remarks (which I hope will be my last on Prof. Wittfogel's “The Legend of ‘Maoism’”) will hardly bear the appearance of a coherent essay. They are simply a collection of fragmentary replies to his own fragmentary points of attack. For some years now Prof. Wittfogel has been obsessed with the view that Fairbank, Schwartz and Brandt (an indivisible entity) have committed an “error” (not an accidental error!) which has led to incalculably evil results in our struggle with world Communism.
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  • 6
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    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    The @China quarterly 2 (1960), S. 59-68 
    ISSN: 0305-7410
    Source: Cambridge Journals Digital Archives
    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
    Notes: The very size of China has imposed on all who would rule it the twin problems of unification and control. Indeed the very first Chinese Emperor, as opposed to Kings among Kings, Ch'in Shih-huang (d. 210 b.c.) achieved the hegemony and his right to this title by being the first to solve these problems. Their continuing intractability in China, despite the mould of history and the unifying cement of the Chinese script, is reflected in Sun Yat-sen's description of the Chinese people more than 2,000 years later as “loose sand.” Ch'in Shih-huang had the stern admonitions of the Legalists as his aid to unification and Sun Yat-sen revolutionary fervour as his. There is no doubt that both or, for that matter, any other would-be ruler in between these two ends of the time scale in China, would have seized on radio as an additional aid, had its potentialities been available to them. Given this basic Chinese problem of unification and control, the failure of the Kuomintang to exploit radio on any effective scale is therefore surprising. China's latest rulers, faced not only with this old problem but also with a new ideology to spread and a new orthodoxy to engender, have naturally sought to exploit it to the full.
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  • 7
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    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    The @China quarterly 2 (1960), S. 100-100 
    ISSN: 0305-7410
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    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
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  • 8
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    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    The @China quarterly 4 (1960), S. 1-2 
    ISSN: 0305-7410
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    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
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  • 9
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    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    The @China quarterly 4 (1960), S. 28-39 
    ISSN: 0305-7410
    Source: Cambridge Journals Digital Archives
    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
    Notes: On the first anniversary of the “Chinese People's Republic” (October 1, 1950), the Peking government had but eleven ambassadors abroad, eight of them accredited to Communist bloc nations. Most had only recently exchanged an army uniform for the proverbial pin-stripes. With such obvious exceptions as Chou En-lai, the men in the Foreign Ministry offices in Peking were ill-trained or untrained “diplomats.” Now, a decade later, there is a new picture. A significant part of the story of China's emergence on the international scene may be found in the rapidly developing foreign service—a service which staffs thirty-two ambassadorial outposts, as well as the various departments in Peking.
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  • 10
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    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    The @China quarterly 4 (1960), S. 76-81 
    ISSN: 0305-7410
    Source: Cambridge Journals Digital Archives
    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
    Notes: The third Congress of China's Literary and Art Workers, the first since the Hundred Flowers Campaign, was held in Peking from July 22 to August 13 “to review and assess” the literary and artistic achievements in the years between 1953 and 1960, “summarise and exchange experience, further define the road of development of socialist art and literature, and consider the tasks to be faced in the coming years.” The presence of Liu Shao-ch'i, Chou En-lai, and other political leaders and the large space which the People's Daily devoted to the meeting indicated its importance. Of the 2,300 delegates there were professionals and amateurs working in local governments and the services and from them a praesidium of over 180 members was elected before the long speeches on the opening day began. Kuo Mo-jo, as the President of the All-China Federation of Literary and Art Circles, first spoke a few words of welcome and then went on to outline the circumstances under which the Congress was convoked and the general political lines along which China's art and literature had been and would be developing. These lines were repeated once more, and elaborated, by Lu Ting-yi, Director of the Party's Propaganda Department and Deputy Premier, who represented the Party and the Government, and subsequently they were to be repeated many times over. The third speaker on the opening day to recite them was Chou Yang, Vice-President of the Federation and a Deputy Director of the Party's Propaganda Department, who also laid down six tasks for the Congress.
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  • 11
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    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    The @China quarterly 4 (1960), S. 88-101 
    ISSN: 0305-7410
    Source: Cambridge Journals Digital Archives
    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
    Notes: At some point in a debate one or all participants usually feel that it should come to an end. Professor Schwartz expresses this wish in his recent comments on my rejection of the “Maoist” thesis; but he does not tell us why. I also think the present discussion should be terminated; but I am quite willing to give my reasons. I see little benefit in continuing to argue the meaning of Mao Tse-tung's development with an opponent who employs methods of evasion, omission, and misrepresentation. However, the underlying issue has not disappeared, and certain points even in this debate require further clarification.
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  • 12
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    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    The @China quarterly 4 (1960), S. 12-16 
    ISSN: 0305-7410
    Source: Cambridge Journals Digital Archives
    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
    Notes: A young girl was walking along the road to Hung-wu-chen, the road which led to market. You would say she was about seventeen or eighteen, and clasped in her arms she carried a white hen. Trotting by her side was a little girl of seven or eight who had come along to buy some little cakes and see what was going on. They were sisters, and their names were Kai-kai and Eh-eh. The sisters talked as they went.
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  • 13
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    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    The @China quarterly 4 (1960), S. 1-11 
    ISSN: 0305-7410
    Source: Cambridge Journals Digital Archives
    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
    Notes: During the Yenan period the Chinese Communists built up a literature as they built up a party organisation and an army: as an instrument of policy, fashioned in accordance with Marxist principles. Like the organisation and like the army, the literature served the needs of the time. Plays, poems, stories, novels, ballads, reportages flowed in profusion from professional writers emerged from Kuomintang jails; from trainees of the Lu Hsün Academy in Yenan itself; from farmers and soldiers who after initial success were welcomed into the ranks of “art workers.” These writings whipped up popular support for the new government and established flesh-and-blood examples of behaviour-patterns for the new society. More effectively than any textbook of theory, they gave instruction in practical Communism.
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  • 14
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    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    The @China quarterly 4 (1960), S. 66-75 
    ISSN: 0305-7410
    Source: Cambridge Journals Digital Archives
    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
    Notes: “This is an historic event of great significance in the political life of the Vietnam Workers' Party and people. With incomparable feelings of joy, we warmly congratulate the conference on its important achievements.” So ran the editorial in the Jen-min Jih-pao (People's Daily) on the morning of September 12, although—unless the Chinese are a nation of masochists, which I refuse to believe—it is hard to discover the reason for this jubilation, for China had just suffered her most humiliating defeat to date in the ideological war she is waging against the Soviet Union. The occasion was the Third Congress of the Vietnam Lao-Dong, or Workers', Party, which met in Hanoi from September 5 to 10. Since it was the first such congress for nine years, the Vietnamese Communists had spared neither trouble nor expense to make it a resounding success. Official delegations from the fraternal parties of eleven Communist states attended, together with representatives from Communist parties of seven non-Communist countries and fraternal diplomats stationed in Hanoi. The date of the congress had been carefully fixed so that proceedings would open three days after North Vietnam's National Day, and the foreign visitors had been invited to come a few days early to sample the delights of this celebration too.
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  • 15
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    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    The @China quarterly 4 (1960), S. 102-113 
    ISSN: 0305-7410
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    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
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  • 16
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    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    The @China quarterly 4 (1960), S. 114-118 
    ISSN: 0305-7410
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    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
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  • 17
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    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    The @China quarterly 4 (1960), S. 141-141 
    ISSN: 0305-7410
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  • 18
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    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    The @China quarterly 3 (1960), S. 1-2 
    ISSN: 0305-7410
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    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
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  • 19
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    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    The @China quarterly 3 (1960), S. 1-2 
    ISSN: 0305-7410
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    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
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  • 20
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    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    The @China quarterly 3 (1960), S. 16-31 
    ISSN: 0305-7410
    Source: Cambridge Journals Digital Archives
    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
    Notes: The events of the six months between October 1, 1959, and April 1, 1960—the period, roughly, between Khrushchev's visit to the U.S. and his visit to South Asia—clearly affected Communist China. What is not so clear is the direction in which China has been moved and the depth and duration of the influence which events have brought to bear on China's relations with the world around her.
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  • 21
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    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    The @China quarterly 3 (1960), S. 1-15 
    ISSN: 0305-7410
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    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
    Notes: The Great Leap Forward has not only been measured by the claimed increases of grain and steel production by so many million tons. Peking boasts too that the Leap produced, in 1958 alone, millions and millions of poems and songs. These products, both in themselves as art and in their way and manner of accomplishment, should reveal a picture of how the mental life, or, more precisely, how the mental as well as physical energy, of the nation is being vigorously mobilised, organised and directed. For, as much of the steel was, regardless of its quality, produced in “backyard furnaces,” so are myriads of these poems and songs, regardless of their aesthetics, made by farm teams in the fields, workers in the factories, and labourers building roads or bridges. The people are goaded and urged, instructed and inspired by tireless party cadres who exhort all social and racial groups that, among other purposes, there has to be a new epoch of poetry production to celebrate the new era in Chinese history.
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  • 22
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    The @China quarterly 3 (1960), S. 32-41 
    ISSN: 0305-7410
    Source: Cambridge Journals Digital Archives
    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
    Notes: Sinkiang occupies an important place in the vast arc of Inner Asia linking Russia and China. Over the past century, it has witnessed recurring political and economic tension between these two Powers. On one occasion, Sino-Russian co-operation suppressed anti-Chinese rebellion among its predominantly Moslem peoples. More frequently, however, Russian influence benefited from these results, to the detriment of Chinese power. In addition, Russian trade concessions during the nineteenth century, and Soviet mineral exploitation in the twentieth century, spurred economic penetration of China's largest province.
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  • 23
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    The @China quarterly 3 (1960), S. 42-58 
    ISSN: 0305-7410
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    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
    Notes: The present dispute between India and the People's Republic of China concerning the frontier between those two countries was, to a great extent, touched off by the developments in relations between Tibet and China, although there had been certain recriminations concerning alleged frontier crossings as early as 1954. Furthermore, a large part of the dispute relates to the boundary as established in accordance with the so-called McMahon Line, resulting from the alleged “treaty” of Simla between the United Kingdom and Tibet of 1904. It is therefore advisable to examine the legal status of Tibet itself.
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  • 24
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    The @China quarterly 3 (1960), S. 74-79 
    ISSN: 0305-7410
    Source: Cambridge Journals Digital Archives
    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
    Notes: The early development of the Chinese communes was intimately linked with the decentralisation of the industrial and administrative machinery, foreshadowed at the Eighth Congress of the Chinese Communist Party in 1956 and carried out during 1957. The rural communes provided the most efficient unit for the management of small-scale industry set up under this scheme, for mobilising manpower in irrigation, implementing repair and other capital works in agriculture, and for generating the internal savings needed to finance investment. Further, they could be used to free women from housework, through the communal facilities they provided, so as to supplement the labour force needed for such undertakings.
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  • 25
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    The @China quarterly 3 (1960), S. 80-84 
    ISSN: 0305-7410
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    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
    Notes: The Chinese poet's call to Bulgaria to follow China's path into a bright Communist future reflects a view of the relationship between the two countries, which towards the end of 1958 was widely held in the West. Bulgaria's “Great Leap Forward” and the methods used to mobilise the masses for the Utopian plan for the economic break-through were linked with the visit of two high-powered Bulgarian delegations to China and interpreted by some observers as signs that the Party leaders in Sofia were deviating from the Moscow course in an attempt to hitch their wagon to the rising star of Peking.
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  • 26
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    The @China quarterly 3 (1960), S. 59-73 
    ISSN: 0305-7410
    Source: Cambridge Journals Digital Archives
    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
    Notes: Whereas throughout most of the world the results of the 1953 censusregistration of Communist China, reporting a population of 582·6 million, evoked anxiety and even alarm, the Communists expressed only pride and overwhelming confidence. As a people “liberated from the oppressive chains of capitalism,” Communist leaders felt that their horizons were unlimited and that feeding and caring for a population of this size presented no problems under a system in which people are “the most precious of all categories of capital.” The simultaneous release of vital rates which indicated a birth rate of 37 per thousand population and a death rate of 17 per thousand, further stressed the “great vitality of the people of new China.” The 2 per cent, natural increase (excess of births over deaths), resulting in an annual population growth of some 12 million, was declared, in line with Marxist doctrine, to be an asset in a country with vast new lands and unexploited natural resources, where additional people create additional wealth.
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  • 27
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    The @China quarterly 3 (1960), S. 85-88 
    ISSN: 0305-7410
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    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
    Notes: To the ordinary man in the drab East German street Communist China is a bore: it strikes him that the main use of this remote and shadowy ally is to help inflate the numerical strength of the “socialist camp” by a few useful hundreds of million souls. He realises that this is meant to overcome his feeling of isolation, to convince him that he is allied not only with a collection of uncouth Balkan tribes and formidable but unloved Russians, but also with a nation that can be claimed to be among the oldest civilised countries of the world, that had invented gunpowder long before even a German monk, Berthold Schwarz, invented it for the West. But on the whole the exploitation of the cultural prestige of the Chinese ally is poverty stricken and inept. Reprints of pre-war editions of a few Chinese novels like The Dream of the Red Chamber, an occasional art book of Chinese paintings or an edition by the publishing house of the Ministry of National Defence of an old Chinese Treatise on the Art of War by Sun Tzu, translated from the Russian, hardly carry great weight or conviction.
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  • 28
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    The @China quarterly 3 (1960), S. 104-108 
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  • 29
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    The @China quarterly 3 (1960), S. 89-96 
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    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
    Notes: When, in the spring of 1949, the Chinese Communist troops captured Nanking in an impetuous surprise advance, there was a Peace Congress in session at Prague. The news of the fall of Nanking was greeted with a raging thunderstorm of claps and rhythmic applause. There followed an outbreak of promiscuous hugging all over the place. The Chinese delegates were carried on fervent shoulders all round the conference room. A Hungarian poet who attended the Congress as a member of the Hungarian delegation withdrew to a sound-proof distance from the jubilant crowd, only to return delivered of a poem written in honour of the Chinese People's Army. The fruit of his labours, entitled “Glad Tidings from Nanking,” was translated that very day into Russian, and later into Chinese. The era of the Grand Victory celebrations had begun.
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  • 30
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    The @China quarterly 3 (1960), S. 108-110 
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  • 31
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    The @China quarterly 3 (1960), S. 97-103 
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    Notes: In September 1956, Ochab, then the First Secretary of the Polish C.P., visited Peking to attend the Congress of the Chinese C.P. When the Soviet delegate, the “liberal” Mikoyan, reproached him abusively for tolerating “anti-Soviet ideas,” the Pole received words of support from his host, Mao Tse-tung. According to Warsaw sources, this was later confirmed in a special letter from Mao and is supposed to have played an important part in inducing Ochab to switch to Gomulka. Thus, the Chinese attitude helped to stiffen Polish resistance when in October 1956 the Soviet delegation headed by Khrushchev landed in Warsaw and threatened to intervene militarily. It is also said that some Chinese leaders in Moscow had argued against the use of force in Poland even before this.
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  • 32
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    The @China quarterly 3 (1960), S. 110-112 
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  • 33
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    The @China quarterly 3 (1960), S. 112-113 
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  • 34
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    The @China quarterly 3 (1960), S. 114-127 
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  • 35
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    The @China quarterly 3 (1960), S. 128-128 
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  • 36
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    The @China quarterly 2 (1960), S. 47-58 
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    Topics: Linguistics and Literary Studies , History , Political Science , Sociology , Economics
    Notes: The countries of Asia and Africa have seen the rise of numerous and powerful socio-political movements during the past few decades, movements which have shaken existing orders and have launched these nations on the road of modernisation. Although these movements have almost always been nationalist in character during the early phases of revolution, subsequently leftist radical movements have arisen; most of these have been Communist.
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    The @China quarterly 2 (1960), S. 73-100 
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  • 38
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    The @China quarterly 4 (1960), S. 1-3 
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  • 39
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    The @China quarterly 2 (1960), S. 16-34 
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    Notes: In the first part of this article I argued that the “Maoist” thesis is a “Maoist” legend. It is so because it is based on a false concept of Marxist-Leninist orthodoxy. And it is so also for two other reasons. Contrary to “Maoist” assertions, Mao in his Hunan Report did not outline a concept for a Communist-led peasant-supported revolution; and he did not, in 1940, present himself as an original top-ranking Marxist-Leninist theoretician.
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    The @China quarterly 2 (1960), S. 1-15 
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    Notes: The Chinese Communists, on coming to power, were confronted with a set of strategic problems totally new to them. No longer a mobile force operating from the countryside, they were after 1949 in control of cities, and were rapidly developing a vested interest in industrial complexes, communication centres, and transportation facilities. Although the Korean War awakened them to the importance of modernised, regular forces, the problem of decision-making in the field of military affairs was exacerbated and complicated by the revolution in weaponry and strategic thinking that had occurred outside China in the very period during which the Chinese Communists were gaining and consolidating their power.
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  • 41
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    The @China quarterly 2 (1960), S. 1-2 
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  • 42
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    The @China quarterly 1 (1960), S. 1-1 
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  • 43
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    The @China quarterly 1 (1960), S. 1-2 
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  • 44
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    The @China quarterly 1 (1960), S. 3-5 
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    Notes: The man who faces his typewriter to set down a thousand words of coherent comment on the Communist revolution in China confronts not only a massive experiment in social engineering but also the fact that his interpretation of that experiment will expose as much of the author as it does of the revolution. Some observers, moved by a deep attachment to the distinctive cultural unity of China and by an antiquarian admiration for the achievements of her traditional elite, seek, as if by public subscription, the preservation of China's relics. Others, more concerned with Communism than with China, see in Mao Tse-tung's progress only the relentless efforts of a new, technological despotism to mould man to the purposes of the totalitarian state. In this revolution, as in others before, the contemporary observer is prone to apply his own measure and thus to fall victim to his own distortion.
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  • 45
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    The @China quarterly 1 (1960), S. 6-8 
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    Notes: A few days after the Japanese occupied Peking in the early days of July 1937, the correspondent of a leading British newspaper wrote his verdict on these events. “With the Japanese occupation,” he said, “the fate of Peking and China has been settled for at least a hundred years.” At that time many would have agreed. China had been drifting to disaster for forty years, and few believed that the Chinese people had the energy, courage or ability to reverse the course of events. Today, more than twenty years later, and after ten years of the Communist régime, the question is no longer what some outside power may do to China, but what China may do to her neighbours. The disorderly aftermath of the Chinese Empire has been settled, the state is once more all too powerful; enormous changes have taken place in the economy and social system. These changes have been initiated and carried through by the Communist régime, in the name of the Chinese people, but in accordance with the theory and practice of Marxist-Leninism. The Chinese Communists will be the first to claim that this is so, even if, here and there, the facts do not always support such a claim.
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    The @China quarterly 1 (1960), S. 12-14 
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    Notes: China is credited with having “gat on her feet.” But the metaphors must be mixed—like the feelings of the Chinese themselves. China also leans on Russia, and is “riding a tiger” (or the modern equivalent, a tank or a rocket). In 1949, Chinese Communism was apparently the only decisive component in the “China Problem”; not now. The decade saw swift and brutal intensification of Communist purposes, internally on the mainland and externally in outward thrusts, leading to great stresses, much loss of the initial support and toleration enjoyed by the régime, and increasing opposition.
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  • 47
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    The @China quarterly 1 (1960), S. 15-17 
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    Notes: What is the best hypothesis to explain the development of the Chinese People's Republic since 1949? Perhaps that, in the view which has dominated the Chinese Communist leadership, the policies of the Yenan period (1935—45) were a deviation from the preferred line of development; the true road was that along which the Party had started in the period of the Chinese Soviet Republic (1931–34) and to which it returned as soon as its power was sufficiently consolidated. This can explain both the considerable practical differences between Chinese-style and Russian-style Communism during the Yenan period and also the failure of predictions based on the assumption that the trends of the Yenan period would continue.
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  • 48
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    The @China quarterly 1 (1960), S. 9-11 
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    Notes: In the original doctrine of Marx, the proletarian Socialist revolution was to be the climax of the process of industrialisation through private capitalist enterprise and was therefore to be expected to begin in the most highly industrialised region of the world. It would occur when capitalist relations of production were no longer adequate to contain the forces of production which they had developed, when the ownership of the means of production had been concentrated in the hands of a small minority and when the great majority of the population had been transformed into propertyless wage earners. That the Socialist revolution should take place first in predominantly agrarian societies and that it should be, not the effect of a fully achieved industrialisation, but the means of bringing it about, was not a possibility contemplated by the early Marxists. But so it has happened, and in Asia and Africa today Communism makes its appeal less as a creed of social justice and welfare than as a system providing a short cut to industrialisation—and its corollary, national power—for weak and underdeveloped countries. The main task of the revolution is no longer to carry out a redistribution of surplus value from an economy already highly productive, but to promote a rapid growth of productivity from low, and largely pre-industrial, economic levels. The Soviet Union, after more than four decades of Communist Party rule, presents itself to the world not as a land where people have equal incomes—which Bernard Shaw regarded is the essence of Socialism, but which are as remote from actuality in Russia as in any bourgeois society—but as a country which by intensive efforts of planned production has overcome an initial economic backwardness and emerged as an industrial and military power of the first rank. In its ten years of history, Communist China has been striving to follow the same path, but the effort required has been even greater jecause of the very small margin available at the outset for capital armation from the national income and the vast leeway to be made up fot “overtaking and outstripping” the most highly industrialised lations of the world.
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    The @China quarterly 1 (1960), S. 18-21 
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    Notes: What facts stand out in bold relief when one surveys the turbulent history of Communist China during the last ten years? It is by no means easy to answer this question. Ten is a good round number, but there are few indications that the tenth year of Chinese Communism marks a terminal point in any sense. The shifts and fluctuations of the last three years have been, if anything, more violent than those of the previous period. It is as difficult as ever to distinguish relatively enduring facts from sensational, transitory facts.
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  • 50
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    The @China quarterly 1 (1960), S. 22-25 
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    Notes: Within her first decade under Communist leadership, China has been transformed from a virtual nonentity into a major world Power. International decisions which ignore her interests are unenforceable against her. Her status as one of the Big Five can in practice no longer be challenged, and must be taken into account even by countries that refrain from acknowledging the changed situation diplomatically.
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    The @China quarterly 1 (1960), S. 26-28 
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    Notes: In my judgment the most striking fact in the new China is the creation of state power. Traditionally, in the agrarian empires of Asia, the government has had relatively little power: at least power of a fundamental kind. It might take arbitrary and startling action; but the total result of such deeds was small. A government, however impressive its trappings, could seldom carry through a sustained reforming policy. In China, custom or Confucius was sovereign, not the emperor.
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    The @China quarterly 1 (1960), S. 29-34 
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    Notes: Communist China is not an “Asiatic” (“hydraulic”) society; nor is Mao's government a replica of the power system called “Oriental despotism.” Comparative analysis reveals basic similarities as well as important dissimilarities between Communist totalitarianism and the absolutist régimes that prevailed in traditional Asia, North Africa and certain parts of pre-Columbian America.
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  • 53
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    The @China quarterly 1 (1960), S. 35-50 
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    Notes: In the ten years of Communist rule since late 1949 a thoroughgoing revolution has taken place on the Chinese mainland in economic organisation, savings and investment, and distribution, with profound effects on the daily lives of the people. Peking has claimed that immense progress has been made on all economic fronts, including the real income of industrial and agricultural workers. It has felt confident enough to shorten from fifteen to ten years (beginning 1958) the target period at the end of which its output of electric power and certain major industrial goods would match or exceed that of Britain. In the non-Communist world, commentators vary greatly in their judgments; they range from those who reject all the official statistics and consider no important progress to have been made during the period, to those who not only accept the claims in tato but have advanced all sorts of arguments to defend even those claims that Peking has later had to repudiate.
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  • 54
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    The @China quarterly 1 (1960), S. 51-60 
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    Notes: Western visitors to the Soviet Union report a growing Russian anxiety about Communist China and its inclinations and potentialities. The Soviet “man in the street,” who recalls what Leningrad and Kiev and Minsk and Odessa experienced during the Second World War, maintains a sober respect for the world's new weapons—whether nuclear, bacteriological or something even more dreadful that is only whispered about. He is increasingly ready to believe, moreover, that Western capitalist peoples share this sober respect, but Communist China gives him cause for deep uneasiness. Is it possible that China might trigger a war which both the Soviet Union and the West would prefer to avoid?
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  • 55
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    The @China quarterly 1 (1960), S. 72-86 
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    Notes: A number of months ago I discussed in an article some conceptual weaknesses in the study of Chinese Communism. To illustrate my point, I briefly reviewed the “Maoist” thesis—the claim that Mao Tse-tung, in 1927 and subsequently, violated basic principles of orthodox Marxist-Leninist Communism.
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  • 56
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    The @China quarterly 1 (1960), S. 61-71 
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    Notes: The foreign policy of Communist China was born in the loess caves of Yenan during the period 1935–45. For the first time after years of fighting, the Communists had leisure for reflection. Their government began to be a magnet for the younger members of the intelligentsia who repudiated the Kuomintang because the Kuomintang had proved unable to defend China's national interests; they were willing to try Communism as the cure for Imperialism. Already the Communist leaders were confident that in the long run they would come to power. In Yenan, in lectures and seminars, they built up concepts and the world picture which, with surprisingly little modification, have governed their foreign policy ever since.
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  • 57
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    The @China quarterly 1 (1960), S. 103-115 
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  • 58
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    The @China quarterly 1 (1960), S. 87-102 
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    Notes: The awakening Tibetan national sentiment foreseen by Sir Charles Bell has exploded into a major revolt against China. It has brought the Sino-Indian “Five Principles of Peaceful Co-existence” policy into disrepute, has altered the balance of power in Asia and may yet in its continuing repercussions be the prime cause, in the solemn words of Prime Minister Nehru, of the Third World War. In 1960 it is imperative that Sir Charles Bell's warning concerning the importance of not overlooking ethnographic Tibet should be heeded. The cartographic manipulation which has taken place in the past has been possible because of the peculiar isolation of Tibet and can be partly ascribed to foreign ignorance. It will no longer be possible now that the Dalai Lama and his government is in India and the new generation of leaders is educated. It must be remembered that those responsible for the success of the revolt themselves come from what has been casually referred to as “ethnographic Tibet,” “de facto Tibet,” “Inner Tibet,” Sikang-Chinghai, Kham-Amdo and Szechuan, according to preference. Not only did the revolt begin in this area, it was carried on with increasing success until this year, and it is not unlikely that it will explode again at any time.
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  • 59
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    The @China quarterly 1 (1960), S. 116-116 
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  • 60
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    The @China quarterly 1 (1960), S. 1-6 
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  • 61
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    The @China quarterly 4 (1960), S. 55-65 
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    Notes: Since the 1920s the pattern prevailing in the field of primary and secondary education in China has been that of a twelve-year cycle divided into three basic parts—a six-year primary or elementary school followed by a three-year “junior middle” or junior high school and a three-year “senior middle” or senior high. The six-year elementary cycle was further subdivided into four years of junior grades followed by two years of senior grades.
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  • 62
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    The @China quarterly 4 (1960), S. 82-87 
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    Notes: “As the motion picture is one of the most popular arts and one of the Party's most effective weapons of propaganda and education, in our film undertakings we must necessarily put political ideological work and the question of creative thinking in the leading position, strengthen the Party's leadership over the cinema....” Thus declared Hsia Yen, Deputy Minister of Culture. But the problem is, how much artistic independence must be sacrificed in order to strengthen the Party's leadership over the cinema? The answer seems to be clear after viewing the dozen or so films from China shown recently at the National Film Theatre in London.
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  • 63
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    The @China quarterly 4 (1960), S. 119-123 
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  • 64
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    The @China quarterly 2 (1960), S. 43-46 
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    Notes: The comparison of the revolutionary movements, the seizure of power by the Communists, and the establishment and evolution of totalitarian régimes in Russia and China is a vast field of study in which little work has yet been achieved. The obvious obstacle is of course the scarcity of scholars in the non-Communist world who are familiar with the language, culture and history of both Russia and China. A truly formidable intellectual equipment is required. Dr. Karl Wittfogel and Dr. Benjamin Schwarz are outstanding among the few who possess it. One hopes that among the rising generations of the western nations the necessary combination of knowledge will become more frequent. Meanwhile those of us who have specialised in the Russian or East European field must learn what we can of China from secondary works and from those original documents which are available in translation. Well aware of the inadequacy of our understanding of Chinese affairs, we can only put to our Sinological colleagues problems which have arisen in the history of the Soviet or European Communist movements or regimes, and ask their opinions on the relevance of these problems, or on the reasons why they are not relevant, to China. It is in this spirit that the following observations are offered, as a contribution not to knowledge but to discussion. The points which I wish to raise are mainly concerned with the relationship of the Communist movement to social classes during its rise to nower.
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  • 65
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    The @China quarterly 2 (1960), S. 69-72 
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    Notes: During the period from 1949 to 1957, which was the year prior to the big leap forward, our country had only ten motion picture studios (six of which were for feature films), and 19 shooting sheds. Now, there are 33 studios (11 of which produce feature films) and 27 shooting sheds. As to projection units, in 1949 there were only some 600 motion picture theatres and not even one mobile projection team in the whole country; by the end of 1957, the number of projection units had risen to 9,965; and preliminary statistics showed that there were about 14,500 units by the end of 1959. As a result of the development of this projection network, the people have more and more chances to see movies; movie audience jumped from 1,750 million man/times in 1957 to 4,050 million man/times in 1959.... During the eight years between 1949 and 1957 we had produced a total of 171 artistic films; but during the past two years since the beginning of the big leap forward, the number of artistic films we have produced is estimated to have reached some 180.... Formerly a feature film needed at least four or five months to shoot, and in some cases it needed a whole year or an even longer time. This time has been greatly shortened since the beginning of the big leap forward. Take, for example, the 18 artistic pictures produced last year as a token to celebrate the National Day; most of them were shot within four or five months, and several were completed within three months. With respect to cost, it drops greatly with the increase in the quantity of production and the shortening of the time for shooting.... With respect to quality which is a question of capital importance, all the 36 films of various kinds produced in celebration of National Day last year were markedly better ideologically, artistically and technically than films made earlier. Of course, strictly speaking, even these relatively better films still have shortcomings in certain respects and various degrees....
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  • 66
    Publication Date: 1960-10-01
    Description: The paper seeks to determine what transverse oscillatory movements a slender fish can make which will give it a high Froude propulsive efficiency, $frac{hbox{(forward velocity)} imes hbox{(thrust available to overcome frictional drag)}} {hbox {(work done to produce both thrust and vortex wake)}}.$ The recommended procedure is for the fish to pass a wave down its body at a speed of around $frac {5} {4}$ of the desired swimming speed, the amplitude increasing from zero over the front portion to a maximum at the tail, whose span should exceed a certain critical value, and the waveform including both a positive and a negative phase so that angular recoil is minimized. The Appendix gives a review of slender-body theory for deformable bodies.
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  • 67
    Publication Date: 1960-09-01
    Description: Experimental data are presented for the growth of vapour bubbles in various superheated liquids, such as carbon tetrachloride, benzene, ethyl alcohol, and methyl alcohol. These data are compared with the theoretical results obtained by Plesset & Zwick (1953) who derived these results by taking into account the heat diffusion across the bubble boundary. The agreement in all cases between experiment and theory is found to be good. The growth of vapour bubbles in slightly superheated water is also presented in the form of experimental data for bubbles just beginning to grow from a point of equilibrium which is presumed to be dynamically unstable. The radii corresponding to the points of equilbrium are of the same order of magnitude as those predicted by theoretical considerations. © 1960, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 68
    Publication Date: 1960-09-01
    Description: This paper continues an investigation into the mixing of a dense layer of salt solution in a turbulent pipe flow in order to obtain a more detailed understanding of the underlying physical processes. The effect of the density difference on the velocity profile in a sloping pipe is calculated using a simplified model, and the results compared with direct measurements obtained by timing streaks of dye at various levels in the pipe. These velocity profiles are also used in conjunction with density profiles to estimate the dependence of the transfer coefficients for salt and momentum K S and K M , on stability. It is found that K S is much more greatly affected by the density gradient than K M , and that the ratio K S /K M may be represented, to the accuracy of the experiments, as a function of the local Richardson Number Ri. The results agree with what is known of K S /K M in neutral and very stable conditions, and they confirm an earlier prediction by Ellison that the critical flux Richardson number, at which K S becomes zero, is much less than unity. Finally, a crude semi-empirical method is outlined which indicates how the new measurements of the transfer coefficients may be related to the overall properties of the flow discussed in the first part of the paper. © 1960, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 69
    Publication Date: 1960-09-01
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  • 70
    Publication Date: 1960-07-01
    Description: When a concentrated pressure travels with constant velocity over the free surface of water, it carries with it a familiar pattern of ship waves. Let viscosity and surface tension be neglected, let the free-surface condition be linearized, let the depth of water be assumed infinite, and let initial transient effects be ignored. Then, as is well known, the wave motion everywhere can be found by standard methods in the form of a double integral. The wave pattern at a great distance behind the disturbance can be found by an application of the ordinary method of stationary phase, which shows that the wave amplitude is considerable inside an angle bounded by the two horizontal rays θ = ± θc from the disturbance, where [formula omitted]. But the method fails in two regions, near the track θ = 0 of the pressure point, and near the critical lines θ = ±θc. These two regions are treated in the present paper. It is shown that near θ = 0 the linearized surface elevation oscillates with indefinitely increasing amplitude and indefinitely decreasing wavelength. (This result holds only when the pressure is concentrated at a point and applied at the free surface.) Near the critical lines the surface elevation at a greater distance behind the pressure point can be expressed in terms of Airy functions, and this expression goes over into the known wave pattern inside the critical angle. It is shown that near the critical lines the crest length increases as the cube root of the distance, and that the separation between crests remains constant. Contour maps of the wave surface are given for three distances behind the moving pressure point. © 1960, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 71
    Publication Date: 1960-07-01
    Description: This paper deals theoretically with the problem of the hydrodynamic stability of a stratified flow of a viscous fluid. The primary flow consists of two laminar streams of viscous fluids of different densities flowing in opposite directions between two parallel inclined planes under the action of gravity. The effect of surface tension at the interface of the two fluids is included in the formulation of the problem. Since instability can be expected to occur at low Reynolds numbers when the inclination is nearly vertical, the solution of the Orr–Sommerfeld equations is developed as a power series in the transverse space co-ordinate. It is shown that for the vertical case, the flow is unstable for all values of the Reynolds number. Surface tension is found to influence both the direction and celerity of the disturbance. Results are also given for inclinations slightly away from the vertical, where small critical Reynolds numbers do exist. © 1960, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 72
    Publication Date: 1960-07-01
    Description: The flow of a viscous incompressible electrically conducting fluid past a sphere is studied; the uniform ambient flow field is colinear with the ambient uniform magnetic field. The force exerted on the sphere is computed for various conductivities and Reynolds numbers; of particular interest is the distinction in behaviour between the flow with ambient particle speed greater than ambient Alfván speed and that with particle speed less than Alfván speed. © 1960, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 73
    Publication Date: 1960-06-01
    Description: In a previous paper (1953b) it was shown theoretically that just below the boundary layer at the surface of a free wave the mass-transport gradient should be exactly twice that given by Stokes's irrotational theory. The present paper describes careful experiments which confirm the higher value of the gradient. The results have an implication for any oscillatory boundary layer at the free surface of a fluid; such a boundary layer must generate a second-order mean vorticity which diffuses inwards into the interior of the fluid. © 1960, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 74
    Publication Date: 1960-05-01
    Description: The hydromagnetic stability of a basic two-dimensional parallel flow of an incompressible conducting fluid in a uniform magnetic field parallel to the flow is considered. By use of the generalization of the Orr–Sommerfeld equation for an electrically conducting fluid, it is shown that any given small wave disturbance can be stabilized by a sufficiently strong magnetic field if the Reynolds number is finite and the magnetic Reynolds number small. Stability of velocity profiles with a point of inflexion at small magnetic Reynolds number and infinite Reynolds number is considered in detail. Perturbation methods are developed to find stability characteristics in two cases, when the magnetic field is weak, and when the disturbance is a long wave. These methods are applied to the jet and the half-jet, which are both found to be unstable to long-wave disturbances, however strong the magnetic field. Nonetheless, these two flows can be stabilized for any given harmonic disturbance of finite wavelength. The analysis of the jet reveals the surprising result that the magnetic field makes inviscid long-wave disturbances more unstable. © 1960, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 75
    Publication Date: 1960-05-01
    Description: The steady motion of an infinitely long solid cylinder parallel to its length in a conducting fluid in the presence of a uniform magnetic field is discussed. Due to Alfván waves originating at the cylinder we find two opposite “wakes” parallel to the applied magnetic field. A formula which relates the total drag on the cylinder to the electric potential difference δϕ between the two undisturbed regions outside these two wakes is derived [formula omitted] where ρν is the viscosity and σ is the conductivity of the fluid. The reduction to a classical boundary-value problem is made for the case of an insulating cylinder. Exact solutions are obtained for the case of a perfectly conducting or an insulating flat strip of semi-infinite width. These give a clear picture of the field, especially in the transition region near the edge of the strip. The case of a strip of finite width is also discussed with special reference to the viscous and the magnetic drags, Df and Dm. We find that [formula omitted], on a perfectly conducting strip, is equal to the viscous drag on an insulating strip for which Dm is zero. Precise values of these drags are given. © 1960, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 76
    Publication Date: 1960-04-01
    Description: When a thin film of viscous fluid is produced by passing it through a small gap between a roller or spreader and a flat plate, it often presents a waved, or ribbed, surface. An analysis is given here in terms of lubrication theory to show why in many cases flow leading to a uniform film is unstable. Account is taken of surface tension which proves to be a stabilizing factor. The most unstable values of the wave-number, n (characterizing the disturbance), are calculated as functions of the dimensionless variable T/μU0, and of the geometry of the system; T is the surface tension, μ the viscosity and U0 a representative velocity of the fluid. For the particular case of a spreader in the form of a wide-angled wedge, these predictions are compared with experimental observations. Agreement is obtained for values of T/μU0 between about 10 and 0.1, but for smaller values of T/μU0 it is clear that other considerations, involving only viscous and pressure forces, determine the nature of the secondary flow. © 1960, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 77
    Publication Date: 1960-04-01
    Description: The flow produced by an infinite rotating disk when the fluid at infinity is in a state of solid rotation is investigated numerically. When the fluid at infinity is rotating in the same sense as the disk, physically acceptable solutions exist in all cases. When the fluid at infinity is rotating in the opposite sense to that of the disk, the only physically acceptable solutions appear to be those in which there is a uniform suction present acting through the disk. © 1960, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 78
    Publication Date: 1960-04-01
    Description: In the steady flow of an incompressible, inviscid, conducting fluid past a magnetized sphere, the first-order effects of the magnetic field and the conductivity are studied. Paraboloidal wakes of vorticity and magnetic intensity are formed, the former being half the size of the latter. The vorticity, generated by the non-conservative electromagnetic force, is logarithmically infinite on the sphere. For the case of a dipole of moment M at the centre of a sphere of radius a, the drag coefficient is [formula omitted] where μ and μ′ are the permeabilities of the fluid and sphere, respectively, β is the ratio of the representative magnetic pressure μM 2 /2a 6 to the free-stream dynamic pressure, and R M is the magnetic Reynolds number. © 1960, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 79
    Publication Date: 1960-05-01
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  • 80
    Publication Date: 1960-04-01
    Description: This article has a twofold purpose: (1) to analyse the available theoretical and experimental knowledge concerning flow in the inlet region of a smooth round tube, and (2) to point out that the e9 amplification factor method apparently predicts natural transition correctly over a significant fraction of the entire inlet lenght of the tube. The successful prediction indicates, but does not prove, that flow in a smooth round tube becomes turbulent at higher Reynolds numbers because transition occurs in the inlet lenght–not in the fully developed Poiseuille rágime. The close agreement between theory and a test result obtained by Pfenninger indicates that the e9 method is valid for a wide variety of flows having x Reynolds numbers of transition ranging from 570,000 to 40 million. The results are applicable to both plane and axially symmetric flows. © 1960, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 81
    Publication Date: 1960-03-01
    Description: When a hollow circular cylinder with its axis horizontal is partially filled with water and rotated rapidly about its axis, an almost rigid-body motion results with an interior free surface. The motion is analysed assuming small perturbations to a rigid rotation, and a criterion is found for the stability of the motion. This is confirmed experimentally under varying conditions of water depth and angular velocity of the cylinder. The modes of oscillation (centrifugal waves) of the free surface are examined and a frequency equation deduced. Two particular modes are considered in detail, and satisfactory agreement is found with the frequencies observed. © 1960, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 82
    Publication Date: 1960-02-01
    Description: The instability of the accelerated interface between a liquid (methanol or carbon tetrachloride) and air has been investigated experimentally for approximate sinusoidal disturbances of wave-number range from well below to well above the cut-off. The growth rates are measured and compared with theoretical results. A third-order theory shows the phenomena of overstability which is found in the experimental results. Some measurements of later stages of growth agree moderately well with the available theory and disclose some additional phenomena of bubble competition, Helmholtz instability with transition to turbulence, and jet instability with production of drops. © 1960, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 83
    Publication Date: 1960-03-01
    Description: The hot-wire anemometer, used for recording speed variations in turbulent flow, involves in its working principle the unsteady heat transfer from a hot fixed surface to a fluctuating air stream moving past the surface. If the wire is maintained at a constant (high) temperature, the rate of loss of heat from the wire changes with the velocity of the incident stream, and the compensating rate of gain of heat, produced by the Joule heating effect of the electric current, changes, correspondingly. The accompanying change of current can be measured, and used to calculate the varying velocity of the air stream. The hot wire may have a diameter as low as 10−4 in. and the Reynolds number of the flow is then of the order of 0.05 for each ft. per sec of velocity. With low velocities, of the order of 10 or 20 ft./sec, the flow past the wire is in the range of small Reynolds number, and the exact equations of flow may be approximated by simpler equations in the manner of Oseen's theory (Lamb 1932). The approximate equations are not easy to solve when the flow is compressible, as it will be in the presence of the large temperature differences imposed by the heat of the wire. If, however, the temperature differences are assumed to be small, the approximate energy equation is no longer linked with the equations of continuity and momentum, and it may be solved without knowledge of the velocity field. The purpose of this note is to give the solution for the temperature field when a warm circular cylinder or a warm sphere is held at rest in a fluctuating stream.
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  • 84
    Publication Date: 1960-02-01
    Description: Measurements of mean velocity, mean flow direction, normal turbulent stress in the direction of flow, and mean static pressure are reported for the subsonic flow field generated by identical twin jets of air issuing from parallel slot nozzles in a common wall and mixing turbulently with ambient room air. At the low nozzle velocity employed (72ft./sec), the two-dimensional plano-symmetric flow was effectively incompressible. Since the end walls prevented interjet air entrainment from the surroundings, a region of highly convergent flow was formed near the nozzles. In this region, contour maps clearly reveal (1) the sub-atmospheric static pressure through that accounts for the jet convergence, (2) a free stagnation point on the plane of symmetry, (3) stable symmetrical contrarotary vortices which recycle air on the concave side of each converging jet, and (4) the super-atmospheric static pressure mound that redirects the merging jet streams in a common downstream direction. Comparisons are made between the development of the flow, in both the region of jet convergence and the region of combined jet flow, and that of the single-jet counterpart which was previously reported. © 1960, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 85
    Publication Date: 1960-02-01
    Description: The results of numerical calculations are presented for the motion of a bore over a uniformly sloping beach. The shallow water equations are solved in finite difference form, and a technique is developed for fitting in the bore at each step. The results are compared with the approximate formula given by Whitham (1958) and close agreement is found. The approximate theory is considered further here; the main addition is a rigorous proof that, within the shallow water theory, the height of the bore always tends to zero at the shoreline. © 1960, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 86
    Publication Date: 1960-02-01
    Description: When a body moves through a stratified fluid, i.e. one whose density decreases upwards, gravity waves are set up and this causes a resistance to motion. An axisymmetric case is considered in which a body moves steadily and vertically through a fluid whose density decreases exponentially upwards. The fluid is supposed perfect, incompressible, and unbounded in all directions. The equations of motion are linearized, and with a fairly general initial motion of the surrounding fluid, the limit of the solution as t ⇒ ∞ is evaluated. Transform methods are used to solve the equation of motion, and the methods of steepest descents and stationary phase are used to obtain approximate solutions. Streamlines and the distortion of the constant density levels for a spindle-shaped body are shown. The curves of resistance against a function of the velocity for the circular cylinder, the sphere, and a spindle-shaped body are also given. A criterion is given for when the maximum wave resistance for a sphere may be expected, and an estimate of this maximum resistance is made. © 1960, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 87
    Publication Date: 1960-03-01
    Description: Townsend (1954) has shown that turbulent vorticity may rotate and strain a diffusion wake, thereby increasing the contribution of molecular diffusion to the total mean dispersion over short diffusion times. To test whether any such effect occurs at longer diffusion times, the lateral dispersion of both helium and of carbon dioxide in air were measured downstream from a continuous point source in the turbulence produced by a grid in a wind tunnel. The data show that, for long diffusion times, accelerated molecular diffusion is negligible, so that molecular diffusion makes only an independent contribution to the total dispersion. © 1960, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 88
    Publication Date: 1960-12-01
    Description: The theoretical study presented in this paper was inspired by the recent report (Krämer 1960) of experiments showing that considerable reductions in the drag of an underwater solid body were achieved by covering it with a skin of flexible material; apparently this effect was due to the boundary layer being stabilized in the presence of the skin, so that transition to a turbulent condition of flow was prevented or at least delayed. The stability problem for flow past a flexible boundary is here formulated in a general way which allows a full exploration of the possibility of a stabilizing effect without the need to assign specific properties to the flexible medium; the collective properties of possible boundaries are represented by a ‘response coefficient’ α (a sort of ‘effective compliance’) measuring the deflexion of the surface under a travelling sinusoidal distribution of pressure.A remarkably simple analytical connexion is established between the present general problem and the corresponding stability problem for the boundary layer on a rigid plane wall, and hence many details of the existing theory of hydrodynamic stability are immediately useful. However, the presence of the flexible boundary admits possible modes of instability additional to those which already exist when the boundary is rigid, and clearly every mode must be considered with regard to practical measures for stabilization—that is to say, it might be useless to inhibit one mode by a device which lets in another. What is believed to be an essentially complete interpretation of the over-all possibilities is deduced on recognizing three more or less distinct forms of instability. The first comprises waves resembling the unstable waves which can arise in the presence of a rigid boundary, but now being modified by the effects of flexibility. These waves tend to be stabilized when the boundary has a compliant response to them, which means the respective wave velocity has to be less than the velocity of free surface waves on the boundary; but it is found that the effect of internal friction in the flexible medium is actually destabilizing. The second form of instability is essentially a resonance effect and comprises waves travelling at very nearly the velocity of free surface waves. These waves can only be excited when the latter velocity falls below the free-stream velocity; they are scarcely affected by the viscosity of the fluid since the ‘wall friction layer’ is largely cancelled, so that damping due to the medium itself becomes the only stabilizing factor. The third form is akin to Kelvin–Helmholtz instability.This interpretation of the theoretical results seems to point to the essential factors in the operation of a flexible skin as a stabilizing device, and accordingly in the concluding secttion of the paper two alternative sets of criteria are proposed each of which would provide a logical basis for designing such a device. The principle of the first alternative explains the success of Gamer's invention, but the second appears equally promising and the relative advantages of the two can really be proved only by further experiment.
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  • 89
    Publication Date: 1960-12-01
    Description: It is shown that for the steady isoenergetic rotational flow of an ideal gas, both the specific enthalpy and the speed of sound can be expressed as functions of the velocity. As a result, it is possible to formulate the equations of motion so that the velocity is the only dependent variable. For a gas whose enthalpy and sound speed are functionally related, the results are a generalization of those for a perfect gas. If the enthalpy and sound speed are independent variables, the new formulation leads to a single vector equation whose solution completely determines the flow.
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  • 90
    Publication Date: 1960-11-01
    Description: An experimental investigation of the explosions of 2 in. diameter glass spheres under high internal pressure has been made. The spheres were initially filled with air or helium at 400 and 326 p.s.i., respectively, and were exploded in air at atmospheric pressure. Experiments on the simulation of high-altitude explosions are also described. Schlieren and spark shadowgraph records of explosion phenomena, and pressure records of the reflexion of the spherical shock wave at various radii, are presented.An account of some initial experiments on the implosion of 5 in. diameter glass spheres is given. The results were not very satisfactory because of the failure of the spheres to shatter in a desirable manner while under an external pressure of 65 p.s.i.Numerical solutions to the air and helium sphere explosions are described and the experimental wave phenomena are shown to be in good quantitative agreement with the theoretical predictions, in that they exhibit all the main features that were predicted and are modified only by the physical limitations of the glass diaphragm. A formation process is associated with the spherical shock waves in practice, resulting in initial shock velocities which are lower than the theoretical values.
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  • 91
    Publication Date: 1960-10-01
    Description: Self-excited oscillations have been discovered experimentally in a supersonic laminar boundary layer along a flat plate. By the use of appropriate measuring techniques, the damping and amplification of the oscillations are studied and the stability limits determined at free-stream Mach numbers 1·6 and 2·2. The wave-like nature of the oscillations is demonstrated and their wave velocities are measured using a specially designed ‘disturbance generator’. It is shown empirically that the stability limits expressed in terms of the boundary-layer-thickness Reynolds number are independent of the Mach number and dependent only on the oscillation frequency. The main effect of compressibility is an increase in wave velocity with Mach number. This has the consequence that the disturbances, although possessing the same dimensionless amplification coefficient as in the incompressible case, have less time (per unit distance) to grow in amplitude. Thus, the adiabatic compressible boundary layer is shown to be more stable than the incompressible one. In general, the experiments confirm the basic assumptions and predictions of the existing stability theory and also suggest the desirability of improvement in the theory in certain phases of the problem. Finally, on the basis of these results a rough estimate of the transition Reynolds number is made in the compressible flow range.
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  • 92
    Publication Date: 1960-09-01
    Description: A singularity is encountered in the flow field about two-dimensional and axisymmetric bodies characterized by a sharp corner, where the fluid velocity becomes sonic. Investigation shows that the problem in question belongs, as do many other discontinuity problems, to the family of asymptotic or ‘boundary-layer’ phenomena of mathematical physics. The solution of a first approximation to the flow equations is given by a series in powers of a variable measuring the distance from the corner, with coefficients depending on an appropriate similarity variable. The leading coefficient of the series is independent of three-dimensional and rotationality effects, in complete analogy to the well-known solution of the corner problem in supersonic flow. Detailed results are presented for the leading singularity and for the first two corrections due to rotationality and axial symmetry of the flow. © 1960, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 93
    Publication Date: 1960-09-01
    Description: An investigation has been made of the flow over axisymmetric spiked bodies at a Mach number of 6·8. For some ranges of the ratio of spike length to body diameter the flow was found to be unsteady. The effect of the shape of the body nose on this unsteadiness was investigated and an explanation of the mechanism of the oscillation is given. © 1960, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 94
    Publication Date: 1960-09-01
    Description: The related questions concerning the transmission of electromagnetic waves are considered: The reflexion and transmission of plane waves at a perfectly conducting layer of gas in an otherwise non-conducting atmosphere, when there is a uniform external magnetic field perpendicular to the layer. Here the main result is that a layer of finite depth h is an almost perfect filter, being transparent to waves of frequency nπA0/h (A0 = Alfván velocity, n an integer). The existence of plane surface waves for such a finite layer. There is always one such wave and, for certain ranges of frequency, two. The first becomes “choked” at the filter frequencies, its velocity first tending to zero and then jumping to a finite value. The second chokes at the frequencies nπA0 a0/h √(a20 + A20 (a0 = acoustic velocity). © 1960, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 95
    Publication Date: 1960-09-01
    Description: Short gravity waves, when superposed on much longer waves of the same type, have a tendency to become both shorter and steeper at the crests of the longer waves, and correspondingly longer and lower in the troughs. In the present paper, by taking into account the non-linear interactions between the two wave trains, the changes in wavelength and amplitude of the shorter wave train are rigorously calculated. The results differ in some essentials from previous estimates by Unna. The variation in energy of the short waves is shown to correspond to work done by the longer waves against the radiation stress of the short waves, which has previously been overlooked. The concept of the radiation stress is likely to be valuable in other problems. © 1960, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 96
    Publication Date: 1960-09-01
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  • 97
    Publication Date: 1960-09-01
    Description: The formula for transfer of [formula omitted]-stuff across the θ-spectrum, which was obtained by Batchelor, Howells & Townsend (1959) for wave-numbers at which molecular conduction is important, is extended here to smaller wave-numbers by means of a simplified general picture of the mechanism involved. The interaction of velocity and temperature fields is represented by a combination of eddy conductivity due to the smaller eddies, and a straining action due to the larger eddies, and this leads to an approximate equation for the θ-spectrum, for a fluid of arbitrary Prandtl number, over at least the equilibrium range of wave-numbers. © 1960, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 98
    Publication Date: 1960-09-01
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  • 99
    Publication Date: 1960-07-01
    Description: Problems of the propagation of shock waves and strong detonation waves through ducts of variable cross-section and ducts with porous walls, and the interaction of a rarefaction wave with a shock and a contact surface in one-dimensional unsteady, or two-dimensional steady, flow are solved using a simple rule. Tables enclosed in this paper permit efficient calculation of several problems of non-uniform shock motion. © 1960, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 100
    Publication Date: 1960-07-01
    Description: Starting with expressions for viscous stress, heat flux and diffusion flux, we formulate a continuum theory for steady flow of a binary mixture of chemically inert perfect gases through a normal shock of arbitrary strength. For shocks of vanishing strength, a solution by series expansion in Grad's (1952) shcok-strength parameter gives a result essentially the same as found previously by Dyakov (1954). For stronger shocks a straightforward numerical integration, quite analogous to that useful in the simpler pure-gas problem, is laid out. The resulting problem has eight parameters: shock strength, ratio of specific heats, ration of bulk viscosity to shear viscosity, Prandtl number, Schmidt number, thermal diffusion factor, molecular mass ratio, and initial mixture concentration. A dozen examples were worked out on a simple desk calculator to exhibit the influence of some of these parameters. They involve the gas pairs argon40–argon36, argon–neon, argon–helium, and xenon–helium. In discussing the results, special attention is paid to the degree of success with which the weak-shock theory may be extrapolated to arbitrary shock strength, and to the question of the accuracy of the Navier-Stokes approximation for a mixture of gases of very different molecular weights. © 1960, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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