Pol Pot's Cambodia

Copertina anteriore
Twenty-First Century Books, 1 set 2008 - 160 pagine
Pol Pot, one of the world's most infamous dictators, rose to power in the 1960s in the Southeast Asian country of Cambodia. In the mid-1900s, Cambodia had been chafing for centuries under Thai, Vietnamese, and French control. As leader of the Khmer Rouge, Cambodia's communist rebel movement, Pol Pot won control of Cambodia in 1975. He intended to establish a farming utopia. Declaring that society needed purification, he set out to extinguish capitalism, non-Cambodian culture, city life, religion, and all foreign influences. But instead of building a strong, just nation, Pol Pot engineered a genocide. During his regime, almost two million Cambodians died from overwork, starvation, disease, and execution. Creating a harsh climate of fear, brutality, misery, and intolerance, Pol Pot's rule drained a once prosperous country of its economic and human resources. Read this book to learn more about the internal workings of one of the world's most devastating dictatorships.
 

Sommario

Introduction Evacuation Of Phnom Penh
6
Chapter 1 The Making Of A Revolutionary
10
Chapter 2 From Political Work To Armed Struggle
40
Chapter 3 Bright Red Blood Which Covers Towns And Plains
60
Chapter 4 Democratic Kampuchea
80
Chapter 5 Life Under Pol Pot
106
Conclusion The Demise Of Pol Pots Regime
124
Whos Who?
140
Glossary
148
Source Notes
150
Selected Bibliography
153
Further Reading And Websites
155
Index
158
Photo AcknowledgmentsAuthor Biography
160
Back Flap
161
Back Cover
162

Timeline
144

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