Two Innocents in Red China

Two Innocents in Red China

Two Innocents in Red China

Two Innocents in Red China

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Overview

In the spirit of his father, Alexandre Trudeau revisits China to put a ground-breaking journey into a fresh, contemporary context. In 1960, Pierre Trudeau and Jacques Hébert, a labour lawyer and a journalist from Montréal, travelled to China in the midst of the Great Leap Forward. In 1968, when Two Innocents in Red China, Trudeau and Hébert’s sardonic look at a third world country’s first steps into the rest world, was released in English, Trudeau had become prime minister of Canada. “It seemed to us imperative that the citizens of our democracy should know more about China,” Trudeau wrote in the foreword. Four decades later, China’s emergence as an economic and military heavyweight beckoned Trudeau’s journalist son Alexandre to retrace his father’s footsteps and add additional material to the book. The result is a thought-provoking new perspective on the Canadian classic that helped open China to the world.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781926706931
Publisher: Douglas and McIntyre (2013) Ltd.
Publication date: 01/06/2012
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 224
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Born in 1923, Jacques Hebert is a Canadian author, journalist, publisher, politician and world traveller who has visited more than 130 countries. He was Senator from 1983 to 1998. Hebert founded two Quebec publishing houses, Editions de l'Homme and Editions du Jour, and Canada World Youth and Katimavik; he went on a 21-day hunger strike when the latter program was scrapped in 1987. He recently returned from an extended stay in Cuba to Montreal, where he lives.

Pierre Elliott Trudeau was the Prime Minister of Canada from April, 1968 to June, 1979, and from March, 1980 to June, 1984. He died in 2000.

Alexandre Trudeauis the second son of the late Pierre Trudeau and Margaret Trudeau. Born on Christmas day, 1973, he was raised in Montreal and obtained a philosophy degree from McGill University. A film-maker and contributing editor at Maclean's magazine, he has reported from Iraq, Liberia, Haiti, and Israel. He covered the 2003 invasion of Iraq from Baghdad, producing a sixty-minute documentary for CTV, Embedded in Iraq. For The Fence, his following documentary, Alexandre lived with two families on opposing sides of the new wall between Israel and the Palestinian territories. A director of Canada World Youth and of the Trudeau Foundation, Trudeau has recently focused attention on the abuse of civil liberties inherent in the Canadian government's use of security certificates to detain suspected terrorists indefinitely, without trial, based on secret evidence. He lives in Montreal.
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