Lofty Expectations and Bitter Reality: Chinese Interpreters for the US Army During World War II
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2017-12-01
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Fredman, Z (2017). Lofty Expectations and Bitter Reality: Chinese Interpreters for the US Army During World War II. Frontiers of History in China, 12(4). pp. 566–598. 10.3868/s020-006-017-0027-7 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25023.
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Zach Fredman
Zach Fredman is a diplomatic and military historian whose research focuses on the United States in the world, modern China, and US-East Asian relations. His first book, The Tormented Alliance: American Servicemen and the Occupation of China, 1941–1949 (UNC Press, 2022), examines the U.S. military presence in China during World War II and the Chinese Civil War. He co-edited Uneasy Allies: Sino-American Relations at the Grassroots, 1937–1949 (Cambridge, 2024) with Judd Kinzley. He is now writing a history of the US military's overseas rest and recreation program during the Vietnam War. This project draws on research in the United States, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Malaysia, Vietnam, Singapore, Thailand, the Philippines, Australia, and the UK.
He has published scholarly articles in Diplomatic History, The Journal of Modern Chinese History, Modern American History, Frontiers of History in China, and Diplomacy and Statecraft. His writing has also appeared in The Washington Post and The Chronicle of Higher Education.
He was previously a postdoctoral fellow at Dartmouth College's John Sloan Dickey Center for International Understanding (2017-2018) and Nanyang Technological University's School of Humanities and Social Sciences (2016-2017). His research has been supported with grants and fellowships from the Institute of International Education, the Mellon Foundation, the American Council of Learned Societies, the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations, and the Association for Asian Studies.
He earned his Ph.D. at Boston University in 2016. In 2017, he received the Edward M. Coffman First Book Manuscript Prize from the Society for Military History and the Betty M. Unterberger Dissertation Prize from the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations.
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