Tragedy in Crimson: How the Dalai Lama Conquered the World but Lost the Battle with China

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PublicAffairs, Feb 1, 2011 - Social Science - 352 pages
Tragedy in Crimsonis award-winning journalist Tim Johnson's extraordinary account of the cat-and-mouse game embroiling China and the Tibetan exile community over Tibet. Johnson reports from the front lines, trekking to nomad resettlements to speak with the people who guard Tibet's slowly vanishing culture; and he travels alongside the Dalai Lama in the campaigns for Tibetan sovereignty. Johnson unpacks how China is using its economic power around the globe to assail the Free Tibet movement. By encouraging massive Chinese migration and restricting Tibetan civil rights, the Chinese are also working to dilute Tibetan culture within Tibet itself. He also takes a sympathetic but unsentimental look at the Dalai Llama, a popular figure in the West who is regarded as a failure by many of his own people. Staggering in scope, vivid and audacious in its narrative aims, Tragedy in Crimson tells the story of a people on the brink of cultural extinction and the rising nation that is quashing them.
 

Contents

Chapter One
1
Chapter Two
27
Chapter Three
49
Chapter Four
75
Chapter Five
99
Chapter Six
117
Chapter Seven
137
Chapter Eight
159
Chapter Ten
201
Chapter Eleven
225
Chapter Twelve
243
Chapter Thirteen
269
Epilogue
291
Acknowledgments
301
Notes
303
Index
321

Chapter Nine
185

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About the author (2011)

Award-winning journalist Tim Johnson has spent the last twenty years as a foreign correspondent for the Miami Herald and the McClatchy Company. He was Beijing bureau chief for McClatchy Newspapers for six years and is now based in Mexico City.

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