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参考书目
(美)伯纳德·托马斯;吴乃华等

  Primary Sources
  See chapter notes for the full range of secondary sources used.
  EDGAR SNOW'S WORKS
  Books
  Far Eastern Front.New York:Harrison Smith and Robert Haas,1933.
  Living China:Modern Chinese Short Stories.Compiled and edited by Edgar Snow.New York:John Day,in association with Reynal and Hitchcock,1936.
  Red Star Over China.NewYork:Random House,1938.Modern Library edition,Random House,1944.
  Battle for Asia.New York:Random House,1941.
  People on Our Side.New York:Random House,1944.
  The Pattern of Soviet Power.New York:Random House,1945.
  Stalin Must Have Peace.New York:Random House,1947.
  Random Notes on Red China,1936—1945.Harvard East Asian Monographs,no.5.Cambridge,Mass.:Harvard University,1957.
  Journey to the Beijing.New York:Random House,1958.
  The Other Side of the River:Red China Today.New York:Random House,1962.Revised edition published as Red China Today(New York:Random House,1970).
  Red Star Over China.Revised and enlarged edition.New York:Grove Press,1968.
  The Long Revolution.New York:Random House,1972.
  Articles
  “In Hula land.”Harper's Bazaar 62(September 1928):98—99,136,138,142.
  “Lifting China Out of the Mud!” China Weekly Review, October 10,1928,84—91.
  “A First Class Stowaway.” New York Herald-Tribune Magazine, October 2l, 1928,10—11,14.
  “Kansas City Boy Stowaway.”Kansas City Journal-Post,November 11,1928.
  “Japanese Interference at the Yellow River Bridge—and Other Aspects of Tsinanfu.”China Weekly Review,January 19,1929,315—318.
  “Adventures in Chinese Advertising.”Advertising * Selling,May 1,1929,30,32,90,92.
  “Which Way Manchuna.”China Weekly Review,July 20,1929,333—339.
  “Saving 250,000 Lives.”New York Herald-Tribune Magazine,September 8,1929,14—15,31.
  “The'Middle Kingdom'from the Clouds.”China Weekly Review,October 19,1929,273—276,278.
  “Chinese Please Use Rear Entrance.”China Weekly Review,November 9,1929,369—370.
  “Son of the Grand Marshal.”Now York Herald-Tribune Magazine,December 15,1929,14—15,25.
  “China Creates a New God.”New York Herald-Tribune Magazine,March 16,1930,4—5,14.
  “Daughters of China's Revolution.”New York Herald-Tribune Magazine,April 6,1930,l—3.
  “The Americans in Shanghai.”American Mercury 20(August 1930):427—445.
  “Chinese Guests Now Welcome.”New York Sun,September 25,1930.
  “Some Results of 35 Years of Japanese Rule in Formosa.”China Weekly Review,November 15,1930,389—391.
  “The Strength of Communism in China,I:The Bolshevist Influence.”Current History 33(January 1931):521—526.
  “En Route from Taihoku to Hong Kong via the Subsidized D.S.K.—a Second-Class Passage with Two Chinese Ladies,a Japanese Girl and Three Japanese Men.”New York Sun,April 28,1931.
  “The Railroad Journey to Yunnanfu Is Filled with Scenic Thrills.”New York Sun,June 30,1931.
  “Canton,Metropolis of South China,Where the Feverish Rush of Occidental Cities Is Noted—Much of the Old Has Made Way for Modern Progress.”New York Sun,April 9,1931.Reprinted as“Canton—Home of Rebels and Revolutions”(China Weekly Review,August 1,1931,344,346—347).
  “The Trial of British Communists at Meerut,India.”China Weekly Review,September 19,1931,106.
  “The Revolt of India's Women.”New York Herald-Tribune Magazine,October 25,1931,14—15,24—25.
  “Calcutta India,City of Contrasting Beauty and Squalor—The Hindu Rituals on the Banks of the Sacred Ganges River.”New York Sun,October 29,1931.
  “In the Wake of China's Flood.”China Weekly Review,January 23,1932,243—245.
  “Says Reds Will Rule China.”New York Sun,October 18,1932.
  “She Fights for China's Masses.”New York Herald-Tribune Magazine,August 6,1993,10—11,19.
  “The Decline of Western Prestige.”Saturday Evening Post,August 26,1933,12—14,67—69.
  “How Rural China Is Being Re-made.”China Weekly Review,December 16 and 30,1933,98—101,202—203.
  “Weak China's Strong Man.”Current History 39(January 1934):402—408.
  “Japan Builds a New Colony.”Saturday Evening Post,February 24,1934,12—13,80—81,84—87.
  “Lu Shun,Master of Pai-Hua.”Asia 35(January 1935):40—43.
  “Christmas Escapade in Japan.”Travel,January 1935,34—38,47.
  “Japan Imposes Her Culture.”Asia 35(April 1935):218—224.
  “The Ways of the Chinese Censor.”Current History 42(July 1935):381—386.
  “Japan Digs In.”Saturday Evening Post,January,4,1936,8—9,56—58.
  “The Japanese Juggernaut Rolls On.”Saturday Evening Post,May 9,1936,8—9,89—90,92.
  “The Coming Conflict in the Orient.”Saturday Evening Post,June 6,1936,14—15,82,84—85,87.
  “Mr.Hirota's Third Point.”Foreign Affairs 14(July 1936):596—605.
  “Interviews with Mao Tse-tung,Communist Leader.”China Weekly Review,November 14 and 21,1936,377—379,420—421.
  “An Army of Fighting Chinese Communists Takes Possession of China's Northwest.”Life,February 1,1937,44—49.
  “Autobiography of Mao Tse-tung.”Asia 37(July 1937):480—488;37(August 1937):570—578;37(September 1937):619—623;37(October 1937):682—686.
  “Soviet China.”New Republic,August 4,1937,351—354;August 11,1937,9—11;August 18,1937,42—44;September 8,1937,124—125.
  “The Long March.”Asia 37(October 1937):687—692;37(November 1937):741—747.
  “I Went to Red China.”Saturday Evening Post,November 6,1937,9—10,98,100-103.
  “The Sun Also Sets.”Saturday Evening Post,June 14,1938,5—6,30,33—34,37.
  “China's Fighting Generalissimo.”Foreign Affairs 16(July 1938):613—625.
  “They Love Us,They Love Us Not.”Saturday Evening Post,April 29,1939,25,62,64,69.
  “China's New Industrial Army.”Left News(London),July 1939,1346—1347.
  “Filipinos Change Their Minds.”Asia 39(September 1939):493—496.
  “Japan's‘Peaceful'Invasion.”Asia 39(October 1939):590—592.
  “Filipinos Want a Guarantee.”Asia 39(November 1939):659—661.
  “China's Precarious Unity.”New Republic,January 8,1940,44—45.
  “Chinese Communists and Wars on Two Continents:Interviews with Mao Tse-tung.”China Weekly Review,January 13.20,1940,244—246,277—280.
  “The Dragon Licks His Wounds.”Saturday Evening Post,April 13,1940,9—11,155,157—158,160.
  “Will Stalin Sell Out China?”Foreign Affairs 18(April 1940):450—463.
  “Chiang's Armies.”Asia 40(November 1940):579—582.
  “The Generalissimo.”Asia 40(December 1940):646—648.
  “Break Is Feared as Chiang-Red Split Deepens.”New York Herald-Tribune,December 26,1940.
  “Reds Fought Off Chiang's Troops 9 Days in China.” New York Herald-Tribune,January 22,1941.
  “Things That Could Happen.”Asia 41(January 1941):7—16.
  “China's Blitzbuilder,Rewi Alley.”Saturday Evening Post,February 8,1941,12—13,36,38,40.
  “Is It Civil War in China?”Asia 41(April 1941):166—170.
  “Showdown in the Pacific.”Saturday Evening Post,May 31,1941,27,40,43—44,47.
  “How America Can Take the Offensive:II.”Fortune 23(June 1941):69,175—180.Also published as“The Political Battle of Asia”in Edmund Taylor,et al.,Smash Hitler's International:The Strategy of a Political Offensive Against the Axis.New York:Keystone Press,1941,49—71.
  “China and the World War.”Asia 41(July 1941):341—343.
  “They Don't Want to Play Soldier.”Saturday Evening Post,October 25,1941, 14—15,61,63—67.
  “What Is Morale?”Saturday Evening Post,November 15,1941,16—17,117—120,122—123.
  “How Russia Upset Hitler.”Saturday Evening Post,January 30,1943,20—21,87,89—90.
  “What Kind of a Man Is a Russian General?”Saturday Evening Post,April 17,1943,20—21,105—106.
  “I Saw It with My Own Eyes.”Saturday Evening Post,May 29,1943,12—13,86,88.
  “The Nazi Butchers Wasted Nothing.”Saturday Evening Post,October 28,1944,18—19,96.
  “Eastern Europe Swings Left.”Saturday Evening Post,November 11,1944,9—11,69—71.
  “Is Red Marriage Turning Blue?”Saturday Evening Post,January 13,1945,28—29,36.
  “The Ukraine Pays the Bill.”Saturday Evening Post,January 27,1945,18—19,82—84.
  “Must China Go Red?”Saturday Evening Post,May 12,1945,9—10,67—68,70.
  “The Stalin Truman Faces.”Saturday Evening Post,June 30,1945,20—21,63—64.
  “Meet Mr.and Mrs.Russia at Home.”Saturday Evening Post,December 22,1945,14—15,65.
  “The Message of Gandhi.”Saturday Evening Post,March 27,1948,24—25,143—144.
  “Will Tito's Heretics Halt Russia?”Saturday Evening Post,December 18,1948,23,108—110.
  “Will China Become a Russian Satellite?”Saturday Evening Post,April 9,1949,30—31,147—150.
  “The Venomous Doctor Vyshinsky.”Saturday Evening Post,October 21,1950,19—21,143—144,146.
  “The New Phase—Undeclared War.”Nation,March 10,1951,220—223.
  “Red China's Gentleman Hatcher Man.”Saturday Evening Post,March 27,1954,24—25,116,118—119.
  “Point IV for America.”Nation,May 12,1956,394—397.
  “A Report from Red China.”Look,January 31,1961,85—88,91—94,97—98,103—104.
  “An African Interview with Zhou En-lai.”Arts and Sciences(London)2(April-May 1964):2—7.
  “Interview with Mao.”New Republic,February 17,1965,17—23.
  “China and Vietnam.”New Republic,July 30,1966,12—14.
  “Mao and New Mandate.”New Republic,May 10,1969,17—21.
  “Aftermath of the Cultural Revolution.”New Republic,April 10,1971,18—21.
  “A Conversation with Mao Tse-tung.”Life,April 30,1971,46—48.
  “What China Wants from Nixon's Visit.”Life,July 30,1971,22—26.
  Miscellaneous Items
  “The Meaning of Fascism.”Yanjing University lecture,December 1934.Published in Peiping Chronicle,January 8—12,1935.
  “First Pictures of China's Roving Communists.”Life,January 25,1937,9—13.
  “The Reds and the Northwest.”Peking Men's Forum talk,January 21,1937.Published in Shanghai Evening Post and Mercury,February 5,1937.
  “Notes on Mao Interview,”Hong Kong,November 4,1939.Edgar Snow Papers—Edgar Snow Collection.
  “The Three Soong Sisters.”November 2,1940.Nym Wales Collection.
  Nym Wales.Preface to China Builds for Democracy.Hong Kong:Kelly and Walsh,1940.
  “China,America,and the World War.”May 31,1941.Undelivered speech prepared for American Writers Congress,June 1941.Edgar Snow Papers-Edgar Snow Collection.
  Autobiographical Note(1944).Random House Papers.
  “Notes on Edgar Snow Conversation with Maxim Litvinov,Vice-Commissar of Foreign Affairs of the USSR.”October 8,1944.Presidential Papers.Franklin D.Roosevelt Library.
  Interview with Edgar Snow.Tokyo,Armed Forces Radio,January 29,1946.Edgar Snow Collection.
  “Missouri Days.”Unpublished chapter for Journey to the Beginning.Random House Papers.
  “The Last American Missionary to China or the Divorce of Mao Tse-tung.”July 1956.John King Fairbank Papers.
  “Notes on Conversations with Old Students(1960).”Edgar Snow Papers-Edgar Snow Collection.
  “Notes on Mr.Edgar Snow's Interviews with Premier Zhou En-lai.”Beijing,August 30,October 18,1960.Edgar Snow Papers-Edgar Snow Collection.
  “Notes on Meeting with Mao Tse-tung.”Beijing,October 22,27,1960.Edgar Snow Papers-Edgar Snow 
  Collection.
  “On Publication of Zhou En-lai Interview and Other China Material.”December 4,1960.Anna Louise Strong Papers,Beijing University.
  Edgar Snow's Will.October 1965.Typed copy,Museum of the Chinese Revolution,Beijing.
  “The December Ninth Movement.”Comment,China Ouarterly 26(April-June 1966):171—172.
  “Notes of Chairman Mao's Talk with Edgar Snow.”Beijing,December 18,1970.Edgar Snow Papers-Edgar Snow Collection.
  Diaries
  Transcripts of Snow's diary notebooks,received from Lois Wheeler Snow
  Books 1—8,1A February1928—January1931
  Book 10 January—February 1933
  Books 11—19 June—October 1936
  Books 20—35 July 1937—January 1942
  Books 37—54 February 1942—November 1948
  Book 58 October 1959—January 1960
  Book 60 October 1962—January 1964
  Book 66 December 1964—January 1965
  Books 71—75,77 July—October 1970
  Book 82 November 1970—February 1971(directly follows Book 77)
  Edited Collections
  Dimond,E.Grey.Ed Snow Before Paoan:The Shanghai Years.Kansas City:Edgar Snow Memorial Fund,
  Undated.Execerpts of Snow letters in the Edgar Snow Collection.
  Farnsworth,Robert M.Edgar Snow's Journey South of the Clouds.Columbia:University of Missouri Press,1991.A compilation,with commentary,of Snow's articles written during his 1930—1931 travels in southern China,Indochina,Burma,and India.
  Snow,Lois Wheeler.Edgar Snow's China:A Personal Account of the Chinese Revolution Complied from the 
  Writings of Edgar Snow,New York:Random House,1981.
  ARCHIVAL COLLECTIONS AND PAPERS
  Edgar Snow Collection
  Major holdings in the collection in University Archives,University of Mis-souri—Kansas City
  Edgar Snow Papers
  Mildred and Claude Mackey Papers
  Howard Snow Papers
  Rewi Alley Papers
  Mary Clark Dimond Papers
  Henry Mitchell Collection
  The collection also includes correspondence files acquired from many Other individuals with a Snow connection,including James Bertram,Israel Epstein,Han Suyin,and Kenneth Shewmaker,and Snow materials from China sources.
  For complete contents of the Edgar Snow Papers,see A Guide to the Edgar Snow Papers.Kansas City:University of Missouri—Kansas City Archives,July 1994.
  Other Archival Sources
  Asiaticus[Heinz Shippe]file,Institute of Pacific Relations Papers,University of British Columbia.Vancouver
  Grenville Clark Papers,Baker Library,Dartmouth College.Copies of the Snow-Clark correspondence from these papers are also in the Edgar Snow Collection
  John King Fairbank Papers,Pusey Library,Harvard University
  Henry Ford Office Correspondence,Henry Ford Papers,Henry Ford Museum,Dearborn,Michigan
  J.William Fulbright Papers,Special Collections Department,University of Arkansas Libraries
  Randall Gould Papers,Hoover Library,Stanford University
  Grace and Max Granich Papers,Tamiment Library,New York University
  Ben Hibbs Papers,Spencer Research Library,University of Kansas
  Indusco Files,Rare Book and Manuscript Library,Columbia University
  Institute of Pacific Relations Papers,Rare Book and Manuscript Library,Columbia University
  Philip J.Jaffe Papers,Woodruff Library,Emory University
  Nelson T.Johnson Papers,Manuscript Division,Library of Congress
  Random House Papers,Rare Book and Manuscript Library,Columbia University
  Snow files,Smedley-Strong-Snow Society of China,Beijing
  Snow files,Museum of the Chinese Revolution,Beijing
  Anna Louise Strong Papers,Manuscript Section,University of Washington Library
  Anna Louise Strong Papers,Library,Beijing University
  Charles Hanson Towne Papers,Rare Books and Manuscripts Division,New York Public Library
  Nym Wales Collection,Hoover Library,Stanford University
  U.S.GOVERNMENT SOURCES
  AND PRESIDENTIAL ARCHIVES
  Department of State.Foreign Relations of the United States:Diplomatic Papers,1944.Vol.6,China.Washington,D.C.:U.S.Government Printing Office 1967.
  ——.Snow documents(obtained through Freedom of Information Act).
  Federal Bureau of Investigation.Edgar Snow file(copy in Edgar Snow Collection).
  Lyndon B.Johnson Library.Presidential Papers.Austin,Texas.
  National Archives.Files of Nixon Presidential Materials.
  Franklin D.Roosevelt Library.Presidential Papers,Hyde Park,New York.
  Harry S.Truman Library,Presidential Papers,Independence,Missouri.
  U.S.Senate Committee on the Judiciary.Internal Security Subcommittee.
  Institute of Pacific Relations Hearings,1951—1952.Washington,D.C.:U.S.
  Government Printing Office,1952.
  PRIVATELY HELD PERSONAL FILES
  Polly Babcock Feustel files
  Dr.Charles and Nina Hogan files
  Helen Foster Snow files
  PERSONAL MEMOIRS
  Alley,Rewi.At,90:Memors of My China Years.Beijing:New World Press,1987.
  Bertram,James.Capes of China Slide Away:A Memoir of Peace and War,1910—1980.Auckland:Auckland University Press,1993.
  Braun,Otto.A Comintern Agent in China,1932—1939.Translated from the German by Jeanne Moore.Stanford:Stanford University Press,1982.
  Fairbank,John K.Chinabound:A Fifty-Year Memoir.New York:Harper and Row,1982.
  Jaffe,Philip J.”Odyssey.”Philip J.Jaffe Papers,Emory University,Atlanta,Georgia.
  Kissinger,Henry A.White House Years.Boston:Little,Brown and Company,1979.
  Service,John S.”Edgar Snow:Some Personal Reminiscences.”China Quarterly 50(April-June 1972):209— 219.
  Snow,Helen Foster.My China Years.New York:William Morrow,1984.
  Snow,Lois Wheeler.A Death with Dignity:When the Chinese Came.New York:Random House,1974.
  “Reminiscences of Anna Louise Strong.”Anna Louise Strong Papers,Beijing University.
  Vladimirov,Peter.The Vladimirov Diaries:Yenan:1942—1945.New York:Doubleday,1975.Edited from a translation supplied by the Novosti Press Agency Publishing House,Moscow.
  Wales,Nym.”My Yenan Notebooks.”Nym Wales Collection,1961.Mimeographed.”The Reminiscences of Bennet Cerf.”Oral History Research Office,Columbia University,1967—1968.
  “Helen Foster Snow.”Oral History Research Ofiice,Columbia University,1977.
  “Interview with Major-General William H.Worton,U.S.Marine Corps(ret.).”Oral History Research Office,Columbia University,1969.
  PERSONS INTERVIEWED
  United States(1986—1990)
  Susan B.Anthony,II.
  O.Edmund Clubb(by correspondence)
  Oliver Clubb
  Harry Davis
  Peggy Durdin
  John K.Fairbank
  Polly Babcock Feustel
  Dr.Charles Hogan and Nina Hogan
  Owen Lattimore(by correspondence)
  Claude Mackey
  William Powell
  Trudie Schafer
  Helen Foster Snow
  John Snow
  Lois Wheeler Snow
  Margaret Stanley
  Leland Stowe
  Dr.Charles White
  China(1987 and 1988)
  Rewi Allry(Beijing)
  An Wei(Xi'an)
  Bai Li(Bao'an)
  Chen Hanbo(Beijing)
  Chen Hansheng(Han-seng)(Beijng)
  Chen Hoheng(Beijing)
  Chen Hui(Beijing)
  Chen Xiuxia(Beijing)
  Dong Leshan(Beijing)
  Dong Weifang(Beijing)
  Du Jiangguo(Yan'an)
  Israel Epstein(Beijing)
  Gao Liang(Beijing)
  Talitha Gerlach(Shanghai)
  Guo Da(Beijing)
  Dr.Huang Guojun(Beijing)
  Huang Hua(Wang Rumei)(Beijing)
  Li Min(Beijing)
  Li Xue(“Mike”—Alley's son)(Beijing)
  Florence Yu Liang(Shanghai)
  Liu Liqun(Beijing)
  Liu Zunqi(Beijing)
  Lu Guangmian(Beijing)
  Lu Wanru(Beijing)
  Lo Xinyao(Beijing)
  Dr.Ma Haide(George Hatem)(Beijing)
  Meng Bo(Shanghai)
  Trudy Rosenberg(Beijing)
  Sidney Shapiro(Beijing)
  Wang Fushi(Beijing)
  Ruth Weiss(Beijing)
  Xiao Qian(Beijing)
  Yang Xiaofo(Shanghai)
  Yu Janting(Beijing)
  Zhang Xiaoding(Beijing)
  Zhang Yifang(Beijing)
  Zhao Rongsheng(Beijing)
  Zhou Shenlin(Shanghai)
  Japan(1987 and 1988)
  Reiko Matsuoka(Tokyo)
  Seiko Matsuoka(Tokyo)
  New Zealand(1989)
  James Bertram(by correspondence)
  India(1989)
  Ram Chattopadhyaya(by correspondence)
  OTHER SOURCES
  Chinese Sources
  Alley,Rewi.“Edgar Snow,”In Six Americans in China,43—70.Beijing:Intercul,1985.
  Liang,Hubert S.”Edgar Snow—the Man and His Work.”Nanjing University lecture,May 1979.Received from Florence Yu Liang.
  Liu Liqun,ed.Ji-nian Ai-de-jia Si-nuo(In commemoration of Edgar Snow).Beijing:Xinhua Press,1982.
  Qiu Ke'an,ed.Si-nuo zai Zhongguo(Snow in China),Beijing:San-lian Bookstore,1980.
  Wang Fushi,ed.”Wai Guo Ji Zhe Xi Bei Yin Xiang Ji”(A foreign journalist's impressions of the northwest).Beiping,1937.Translation of portions of Snow's Red Star Over China.
  Wang Xing,ed.China Remembers Edgar Snow.Beijing:China Publications Centre,1982.
  Wu Liangping,ed.Mao Zedong i-jiu san-liu nian tong Si-nuo de tan-hua(Mao Zedong's 1936 talks with Edgar Snow).Beijing,August 1979,3-S Society files.
  Xixing Man Ji(Journey to the west).Beijng:Xinhua Press,1979.Translation by Don Leshan of Red Star Over China.
  Zhang Keming.“Guomindang Zhengfu dui Si-nuo Zhu-zuo de Cha-jin”(Regarding the banning of Snow's works by the Kuomintang government).She-hui Ke-xue(Social sciences)(Fudan University,Shanghai)1 (1985):99—100.
  Zhang Xiaoding.”Shan yao Shijie de'Hong Xing'”(The“Red Star”shines over the world).Bulletin of the China Socity of Library Science(Beijing)1(1980):84—89.
  ——.”Si-nuo yu Xixing Man Ji”(Snow and Journey to the West).Chang Cheng(Great wall)(Beijing)1 (1980):184—191.
  Zhao Rongsheng and Zhao Yu,eds.”I-er-jiu”zai Wei-ming Lu-pan(The“December Ninth”movement at No-Name lakeside).Beijing:Beijing Press,1985.
  PUSSIAN SOURCES
  Bereznvi,L.A.“Zarozhdenie promaoiskoy kontseptsii kitaiskoy revolutsii v amerikanskoy istoriografii”(Emergence of the pro-Maoist conception of the Chinese revolution in U.S.historiography).In Istoriografia i istochnikovedenie istorii stran Asii i Afriki(Historiography and bibliography of history of countries of Asia and Africa),part 4,12—23.Leningrad State Univetsity,1975.
  Borisov,O.B.,and B.T.Koloskov.Sino-Soviet Relations,1945—1970.Bloomington:Indiana University Press,1975.Translated from the Russian “by machine,”and edited,with an introductory essay,by Vladimir Petrov.
  Pashchenko,E.“Edgar Snow and the‘China Card.'”Far Eastern Affairs(Moscow)1(1981):151—160.
  Reviews of Red Star Over China.Knizhnye Novosti(Book news)(Moscow),nos.12,17—18(1938).
  Snow,E.Geroicheskii narod Kitaya(Heroic people of China).Moscow:C.K.VLKSM—Molodaya Gvardiya,1938,Abridged translation of Red Star Over China.
  Titov,A.S.“O polititcheskikh kontaktakh Mao Tsze-duna s Edgarom Snow”(Political contacts of Mao Zedong with Edgar Snow).Problemy Dalnego Vostoka(Problems of the Far Esat)(Moscow)2(1972):119—127.
  OTHER WRITINGS ON EDGAR SNOW
  Boorstin,Robert O.“Edgar Snow and America's Search for a Better China:The Making of Red Star Over China,1928—1938.”B.A.thesis,Harvard University,1981.
  Dimond,Mary Clark.Edgar Snow,1905—1972.Kansas City:Edgar Snow Memorial Fund,University of Missouri —Kansas City,1982.
  Erickson,Bruce R.“The Reporting of Edgar Snow.”M.S.thesis,University of Kansas,1976.
  Hamilton,John Maxwell.“The Missouri News Monopoly and American Altruism in China:Thomas F.F.Millard,J.B.Powell,and Edgar Snow.”Pacific Historical Review 55(February 1986):27—48.
  ——.“Edgar Snow:China Hand from Missouri.”Missouri Historical Review 81(April 1987):253—274.
  ——.Edgar Snow:A Biography.Bloomington:Indiana University Press,1988.Israel,Jerry.“Mao's Mr.America:Edgar Snow's Images of China.”Pacific Historical Review 47(February 1978):107—122.
  Shewmaker,Kenneth E.Americans and Chinese Communists,1927—1945:A Persuading Encounter.Ithaca:Cornell University Press,1971.Includes material on Edgar Snow and Helen Foster Snow.
  Snow,Lois Wheeler.“The Burial of Edgar Snow.”New Republic,January 26,1974,9—11.
  

冒险的岁月—埃德加·斯诺在中国/(美)伯纳德·托马斯著;吴乃华等译.—北京:世界知识出版社,1999.7
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