New Books Network

Yunxiang Gao, "Arise Africa, Roar China: Black and Chinese Citizens of the World in the Twentieth Century" (UNC Press, 2021)

Nov 8, 2025
Yunxiang Gao, a history professor at Ryerson University, shares fascinating insights from her research on Black and Chinese connections in the 20th century. She uncovers the collaborative networks between African American icons like W. E. B. Du Bois and their Chinese counterparts, Liu Liangmo and Sylvia Si-lan Chen. Gao highlights the global impact of these relationships during significant historical moments. Additionally, she discusses how Chinese perceptions of Black intellectuals evolved over time, reflecting on the vital roles of influential spouses in shaping pro-China sentiments.
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ADVICE

Train Multilingual Researchers

  • Build graduate training that includes multilingual skills for Afro-Asian research.
  • Pursue archives in multiple languages to avoid one-sided narratives.
INSIGHT

Five Citizens Of The World

  • Yunxiang Gao frames the book around three famous African Americans and two lesser-known Chinese allies to reveal dense transpacific networks.
  • This biographical, transnational method exposes intertwined cultural and political exchanges across WWII and the Cold War.
ANECDOTE

Hughes Met Si-lan In Moscow

  • Sylvia Si-lan Chen met Langston Hughes in Moscow in 1932 while he worked on a film project that never materialized.
  • Their encounter became personal and propelled Hughes' later engagement with China and Chinese cultural networks.
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