Chiang Kai-shek's Secret Past
Traditional Chinese陳潔如回憶錄
Simplified Chinese陈洁如回忆录

Chiang Kai-shek's Secret Past: The Memoir of His Second Wife, Ch'en Chieh-ju is a book by Jennie Chen Jieru (as Chen Chieh-ju), with Lloyd E. Eastman as the editor and author of the introduction. It was the final work with work done by Eastman.[1]

Chen was the second wife of Chiang Kai-shek, and this book is a memoir of her experiences with Chiang.

Background

Chen hoped to get revenue by publishing a book, and Chiang had encouraged Chen to keep a diary, allowing her to remember what people said in conversations.[2] Chen told her story to a friend, a banker in Hong Kong named James Lee. He secretly wrote the memoir in English.[1] The Kuomintang (KMT), Chiang's political party, attempted to prevent Chen's recollections from going public.[3] The KMT had asked Chen to give the party all of the correspondence she had.[4]

Eastman, a professor, made some copyediting, including in regards to the use of English, and wrote his own footnotes.[1] The Taiwan edition published in 1992 includes an introduction written by Wang Ke-wen, a professor who studied the KMT who identified which parts of the memoir were not accurate.[2] Book reviewer Gregor Benton wrote that Wang "finds so many mistakes and untruths in it that Wang is unable to accept the veracity even of its account of Chiang Kai-shek's personal behaviour toward Jennie."[1] Eastman himself stated Chiang Kai-shek's Secret Past "contains a number of errors, both large and small".[1] However Eastman reasoned that the memoirs were largely accurate because of her presence at various events, her seven-year marriage, and several of her pre-breakup accounts being, in the words of Roger B. Jeans of Washington and Lee University, "remarkably free of acrimony".[2]

Contents

The book includes copies of letters written by Chiang and letters written to Chiang.[5]

Jeans stated that Chen had "understandable bitterness at her treatment by Chiang", which, along with the financial rationale, "naturally arouses skepticism among readers."[2]

Reception

Benton wrote that he wished that there were additional footnotes that discussed which parts of the accounts were or were not reliable and a text comparison of the letters to events which would have proven parts of the memoir true. He stated "Had enough of the letters been corroborated, I would feel safer accepting controversial statements by Jennie not open to such checking."[6]

An American secretary named Ginny Connor, who took her own notes of Jennie Chen's memoirs, stated that Eastman's status of a professor meant he successfully proved that Chen's words were true, and Connor stated her desire to write her own book using the memoirs she had.[4]

References

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Benton, p. 1162.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Jeans, p. 63.
  3. Jeans, p. 62.
  4. 1 2 Forestier, Katherine (1993-11-20). "Secretary saw that Jennie's truth was told". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 2021-06-27.
  5. Benton, p. 1163.
  6. Benton, p. 1162-1163.
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