The Ebb and Flow of Chinese Petroleum: A Story Told by a Witness: Ideas, History, and Modern China, cartea 21
Autor Mao Huahe Mao Yiran, Thomas M. Seay Thomas Smithen Limba Engleză Hardback – 31 iul 2019
Din seria Ideas, History, and Modern China
- 18% Preț: 763.38 lei
- 18% Preț: 831.69 lei
- 18% Preț: 554.70 lei
- 18% Preț: 814.85 lei
- 18% Preț: 820.19 lei
- 18% Preț: 1238.54 lei
- 18% Preț: 1209.29 lei
- 18% Preț: 954.60 lei
- 18% Preț: 1326.86 lei
- 18% Preț: 605.28 lei
- 18% Preț: 788.31 lei
- 18% Preț: 669.17 lei
- 18% Preț: 669.65 lei
- 18% Preț: 666.93 lei
- 18% Preț: 941.57 lei
- 18% Preț: 612.68 lei
- 18% Preț: 610.94 lei
- 18% Preț: 558.43 lei
- 18% Preț: 687.08 lei
- 18% Preț: 856.34 lei
- 18% Preț: 836.94 lei
- 18% Preț: 836.18 lei
- 18% Preț: 685.85 lei
Preț: 881.44 lei
Preț vechi: 1074.93 lei
-18% Nou
Puncte Express: 1322
Preț estimativ în valută:
168.70€ • 177.97$ • 140.58£
168.70€ • 177.97$ • 140.58£
Carte indisponibilă temporar
Doresc să fiu notificat când acest titlu va fi disponibil:
Se trimite...
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004402720
ISBN-10: 9004402721
Pagini: 367
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.7 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Ideas, History, and Modern China
ISBN-10: 9004402721
Pagini: 367
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.7 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Ideas, History, and Modern China
Cuprins
Foreword
A Lingering Sentiment for Chinese Petroleum
Maps
Notes on Author, Translator, and Others
1 Chinese Advances with Petroleum in Antiquity
2 The Six Old Oilfields in Modern China: Small Scale and Weak Foundation
3 China’s First On-Land Oilfield: Yanchang Oilfield
4 Yumen Oilfield, 1939: China’s First Modern Petroleum Base
5 China’s Petroleum Industry Takes Off
6 Yumen Oilfield: Cradle of the Chinese Petroleum Industry
7 Pioneering a Great Cause at Qinghai Oilfield
8 Karamay: New China’s First Big Oilfield
9 High Hopes for Sichuan Oil and Gas
10 The Anti-Rightist Movement and Great Leap Forward Harm the Petroleum Industry
11 The Search for Daqing Oilfield
12 Constructing Daqing Oilfield
13 “In Industry, Learn from Daqing” Reconsidered (Part One)
14 “In Industry, Learn From Daqing” Reconsidered (Part Two)
15 A Scribe—My Petroleum Career
16 Advancing on the Crest of Victory: Switching the Battleground to Bohai Bay Basin
17 The Jianghan Oil Campaign: Zhou Enlai’s Moves to Protect the Oil Industry
18 An Oil Industry Ready to Launch Out in All Directions
19 The Sudden Rise and Fall of Huabei Oilfield
20 Diary of the Deputy Executive of Huabei Oilfield
21 Ten Years of Endeavor, Leading Industry with High Speed
22 Hua Guofeng Endorses Kang Shi’en’s Proposal of a Dozen Daqings
23 Hua Guofeng Resigns, and the Oil Industry Faces a Storm
24 The Oil Industry Reels from Accidents, Scandals, and Vendettas
25 Rolling a Boulder Uphill
26 The Debate on Shengli Oilfield’s “Second Daqing Plan”
27 Seven Situations and Severe Challenges
28 Origin of the Tarim Oil Campaign
29 Wang Tao Decides: Go All Out in Tarim without Foreign Investment
30 The State Council Ratifies the Tarim Oil Campaign
31 Seven Achievements of the Tarim Oil Campaign
32 Falling between Two Stools
33 Too Much Investment, Too Much Waste, Too Few Results
34 Overstating Achievements and Experiences
35 Other Issues Relating to the Tarim Campaign
36 A Dry Duck Trying to Swim: the Difficulties of Offshore Petroleum Exploration
37 Leading the Reform and Opening-Up
38 International Cooperation Increases, an Offshore Daqing Emerges
39 Integrating Internationally, Creating a New Company
40 Engaging in International Cooperation, Exploring Foreign Oil and Gas Supplies
41 The Oil Industry in Taiwan
Epilogue
A Lingering Sentiment for Chinese Petroleum
Maps
Notes on Author, Translator, and Others
Part 1: The Yanchang Era (1877–1949): Advanced in Antiquity, Backward in Modern Times
1 Chinese Advances with Petroleum in Antiquity
2 The Six Old Oilfields in Modern China: Small Scale and Weak Foundation
3 China’s First On-Land Oilfield: Yanchang Oilfield
4 Yumen Oilfield, 1939: China’s First Modern Petroleum Base
Part 2: The Yumen Era (1950–1959): Laying the Foundation, Setting Petroleum Development Policy
5 China’s Petroleum Industry Takes Off
6 Yumen Oilfield: Cradle of the Chinese Petroleum Industry
7 Pioneering a Great Cause at Qinghai Oilfield
8 Karamay: New China’s First Big Oilfield
9 High Hopes for Sichuan Oil and Gas
10 The Anti-Rightist Movement and Great Leap Forward Harm the Petroleum Industry
Part 3: The Daqing Era (1960–1969): China No Longer “Poor in Oil”
11 The Search for Daqing Oilfield
12 Constructing Daqing Oilfield
13 “In Industry, Learn from Daqing” Reconsidered (Part One)
14 “In Industry, Learn From Daqing” Reconsidered (Part Two)
15 A Scribe—My Petroleum Career
16 Advancing on the Crest of Victory: Switching the Battleground to Bohai Bay Basin
Part 4: The Jianghan Era (1970–1979): Against the Current, China Becomes a Big Oil-Producing Country
17 The Jianghan Oil Campaign: Zhou Enlai’s Moves to Protect the Oil Industry
18 An Oil Industry Ready to Launch Out in All Directions
19 The Sudden Rise and Fall of Huabei Oilfield
20 Diary of the Deputy Executive of Huabei Oilfield
21 Ten Years of Endeavor, Leading Industry with High Speed
Part 5: Shengli Era (1980–1989): When the Gods Fight, Mortals Suffer: Rolling a Boulder Uphill
22 Hua Guofeng Endorses Kang Shi’en’s Proposal of a Dozen Daqings
23 Hua Guofeng Resigns, and the Oil Industry Faces a Storm
24 The Oil Industry Reels from Accidents, Scandals, and Vendettas
25 Rolling a Boulder Uphill
26 The Debate on Shengli Oilfield’s “Second Daqing Plan”
27 Seven Situations and Severe Challenges
Part 6: The Tarim Era (1990–2000): Bad Decisions Lead to Zero Increase of On-Land Oil Production
28 Origin of the Tarim Oil Campaign
29 Wang Tao Decides: Go All Out in Tarim without Foreign Investment
30 The State Council Ratifies the Tarim Oil Campaign
31 Seven Achievements of the Tarim Oil Campaign
32 Falling between Two Stools
33 Too Much Investment, Too Much Waste, Too Few Results
34 Overstating Achievements and Experiences
35 Other Issues Relating to the Tarim Campaign
Part 7: The Offshore Era (1953–2000): Leading the Reform, Another Daqing Realized
36 A Dry Duck Trying to Swim: the Difficulties of Offshore Petroleum Exploration
37 Leading the Reform and Opening-Up
38 International Cooperation Increases, an Offshore Daqing Emerges
39 Integrating Internationally, Creating a New Company
40 Engaging in International Cooperation, Exploring Foreign Oil and Gas Supplies
41 The Oil Industry in Taiwan
Epilogue
Notă biografică
Mao Huahe worked in China’s petroleum industry for 33 years, from 1960 to 1993, when he retired. He worked on the front line at oil campaign sites and at the Ministry of Petroleum in Beijing. Throughout much of his career, he worked as a speechwriter for the Ministry of Petroleum’s leadership and as an executive in the oil industry, so he has broad, direct experience with China’s petroleum industry. He started writing this book in 1999 and finished it only in 2018. This book is the summation of more than fifty years of his work and observations.
Besides visiting many of the oilfields discussed in this book, Mao Yiran lived in Daqing Oilfield and Jianghan Oilfield as a child and worked in Huabei Oilfield for a year (1977). After receiving her B.A. in English from Beijing Foreign Languages Institute, she worked for the Chinese Ministry of Education for a year (1982). She then pursued graduate study at the University of Iowa, where she received two M.A. degrees, in comparative literature (1985) and art history (1988). Her translation of Qian Zhongshu’s novella Cat was published by Joint Publishing (H.K.) Co., Ltd. in 2001 and included in Humans, Beasts, Ghosts by Columbia University Press in 2011. She now lives in Palo Alto, California, and is the proud mother of Selena, Arianna, and Apollo.
Thomas E. Smith received his Ph.D. in Chinese from the University of Michigan in 1992. He lived in Taiwan from 1983 to 1985, as a student, and from 1994 to 2016, when he worked for Taiwan’s Bureau of Foreign Trade as a translator and editor. Recent projects have included most of the translated essays in Out of Character: Decoding Chinese Calligraphy (San Francisco Asian Art Museum, 2012) and in Treasures from Across the Kunlun Mountains: Islamic Jades in the National Palace Museum Collection (Taipei Palace Museum, 2015). In 2013, his annotated translation of part of Tao Hongjing’s (456–536) Zhen’gao, Declarations of the Perfected, Part One: Setting Scripts and Images into Motion, was published by Three Pines Press. He currently resides in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Thomas Seay is a Silicon Valley software engineer who enjoys a double-life as translator, writer and opiner on all things political, philosophical and culinary. He has written for and published translations in several European academic journals with pretentious names. Presently, he is busy penning his most ambitious and acrimonious work to date, an instructional manual on how to identify and excoriate postmodernists. Malleus Maleficarum is already taken, so he’ll have to come up with another title.
Besides visiting many of the oilfields discussed in this book, Mao Yiran lived in Daqing Oilfield and Jianghan Oilfield as a child and worked in Huabei Oilfield for a year (1977). After receiving her B.A. in English from Beijing Foreign Languages Institute, she worked for the Chinese Ministry of Education for a year (1982). She then pursued graduate study at the University of Iowa, where she received two M.A. degrees, in comparative literature (1985) and art history (1988). Her translation of Qian Zhongshu’s novella Cat was published by Joint Publishing (H.K.) Co., Ltd. in 2001 and included in Humans, Beasts, Ghosts by Columbia University Press in 2011. She now lives in Palo Alto, California, and is the proud mother of Selena, Arianna, and Apollo.
Thomas E. Smith received his Ph.D. in Chinese from the University of Michigan in 1992. He lived in Taiwan from 1983 to 1985, as a student, and from 1994 to 2016, when he worked for Taiwan’s Bureau of Foreign Trade as a translator and editor. Recent projects have included most of the translated essays in Out of Character: Decoding Chinese Calligraphy (San Francisco Asian Art Museum, 2012) and in Treasures from Across the Kunlun Mountains: Islamic Jades in the National Palace Museum Collection (Taipei Palace Museum, 2015). In 2013, his annotated translation of part of Tao Hongjing’s (456–536) Zhen’gao, Declarations of the Perfected, Part One: Setting Scripts and Images into Motion, was published by Three Pines Press. He currently resides in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Thomas Seay is a Silicon Valley software engineer who enjoys a double-life as translator, writer and opiner on all things political, philosophical and culinary. He has written for and published translations in several European academic journals with pretentious names. Presently, he is busy penning his most ambitious and acrimonious work to date, an instructional manual on how to identify and excoriate postmodernists. Malleus Maleficarum is already taken, so he’ll have to come up with another title.