Citations:Tiananmen Square

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English citations of Tiananmen Square

Plaza in Beijing[edit]

1979 1989 1990s 2005 2010s 2021 2022
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 1979, Govind Kelkar, China After Mao[1], New Delhi: USHA Publications, page 85:
    On my return from the meeting with Dr Fry, I spent some time walking about Tiananmen Square and took some photographs. Though I had not seen any wall posters there, I did notice six large portraits of Marx, Engels, Lenin, Stalin, Mao and Hua. In the middle of Tiananmen Square there were several small open air photography stalls around which people were queuing up to have themselves photographed at the great revolutionary centre.
  • 1989 June 4, Kate Adie, 0:11 from the start, in Archive: Chinese troops fire on protesters in Tiananmen Square - BBC News[2], Peking: BBC News, published 2014:
    On the streets leading down to the main road to Tiananmen Square, furious people stared in disbelief at the glow in the sky, listening to the sound of shots.
  • 1989, Yi Mu, Mark V. Thompson, Crisis at Tiananmen : Reform and Reality in Modern China[3], San Francisco: China Books, →ISBN, page 16:
    On April 16, several hundred students went to Tiananmen Square to place wreaths around the massive Monument to the People’s Heroes, an action that should have alerted the authorities to possible unrest. On April 18, more than 6,000 students marched from Beijing University to Tiananmen Square early in the morning and launched a sit-in in front of the Great Hall of the People. And the next day, there were reports of conflicts between the students and security guards in front of Zhongnanhai, headquarters of the Communist Party and residential compound of many top leaders.
  • 1990, Ronald Reagan, An American Life[4], Pocket Books, →ISBN, pages 372–373:
    Only history can tell us where China will go from here. The Chinese leadership's brutal crackdown on students seeking fundamental democratic rights makes it difficult to chart the future. Those brave students who laid down their lives against the tanks of Tiananmen Square confirmed what I'd always believed: that no totalitarian society can bottle up the instinctive drive of men and women to be free, and that once you give a captive people a little freedom, they'll demand still more.
  • 1992, Richard Nixon, “The Real World”, in Seize the Moment[5], Simon & Schuster, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 20:
    Even in China—a country with few significant democratic traditions—a million demonstrators gathered in Tiananmen Square to demand political reform.[...]The ensuing violent crackdown by Chinese leaders in Tiananmen Square dashed democratic hopes and outraged the world. Yet considering the dramatic democratic triumphs of 1989, most observers viewed this brutal repression as a tragic but temporary aberration.
  • 1998, George H. W. Bush, Brent Scowcroft, “Untying a Knot”, in A World Transformed[6], New York: Alfred A. Knopf, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 86:
    To mourn the death of Hu, whom many considered a sincere reformer, thousands of students marched to Tiananmen Square, a central intersection of Beijing, the symbolic heart of the capital and often the site of China’s national celebrations.
  • 2005, Bill Clinton, My Life[7], volume II, New York: Vintage Books, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 173:
    After the violence in Tiananmen Square and the crackdown on dissidents that followed, Americans from across the political spectrum felt the Bush administration had been too quick to reestablish normal relations with Beijing.
  • 2008, Nancy Pelosi, “A Voice That Will Be Heard”, in Know Your Power: A Message to America's Daughters[8], Doubleday, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 92:
    Another issue important to my district is human rights, specifically what is happening in China. My district includes San Francisco's famous Chinatown, and many of my constituents were deeply concerned—as was I—when the Chinese government began to crack down on protesters who were demonstrating peacefully in Beijing and throughout China. Huge demonstrations led to the Tiananmen Square massacre, where more than two thousand people who had dared to speak out against the government were killed and many more injured. The massacre was followed by even more suppression and imprisonment of protesters.
  • 2010, Walter Mondale, David Hage, The Good Fight: A Life in Liberal Politics[9], Scribner, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 221:
    Ultimately, Deng was able to utter that memorable line about his philosophy of communism: I don’t care about the color of the cat as long as it catches mice. If it hadn’t been for the Tiananmen Square tragedy, I think he would be remembered as a world hero.
  • 2011, Henry Kissinger, On China[10], New York: Penguin Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 112:
    In 2011, a statue of Confucius was placed in Tiananmen Square within sight of Mao’s mausoleum — the only other personality so honored.
  • 2012 [1999 October 1], Zemin Jiang, “Speech at a Ceremony in Celebration of the 50th Anniversary of the People's Republic of China”, in Selected Works of Jiang Zemin[11], volume II, Beijing: Foreign Languages Press, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 408:
    Today, we gather here in the magnificent Tiananmen Square for a grand celebration of the 50th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China.
  • 2014 March 1, Philip Wen, Sanghee Liu, “Strangers in their own land: is China forcing Uighurs to extremes?”, in Sydney Morning Herald[12]:
    The symbolic heart of political power in China, Tiananmen Square, is among the most tightly controlled and patrolled areas in Beijing. But on October 28 last year, shortly after noon, the constant police presence and surveillance was undone by a rudimentary plot.
  • 2021 March 30, “Beijing Half Marathon resumes in April”, in huaxia, editor, Xinhua News Agency[13], archived from the original on 02 April 2021:
    The half marathon covers a total length of 21.0975 km, with a limited number of 10,000 participants, starting from Tiananmen Square and ending at the Olympic Park.
  • 2021 October 30, “China cracks down over 'serious' Covid outbreak”, in France 24[14], archived from the original on 30 October 2021:
    In Beijing, authorities ordered all cinemas closed until November 14 in the capital's Xicheng district, which lies west of Tiananmen Square and is home to over a million people.
  • 2022 March 5, Kevin Yao, Ryan Woo, “China to crack down on use of leanness enhancers in cattle and sheep”, in Reuters[15], archived from the original on 05 March 2022:
    "We must make economic stability our top priority," Li told delegates gathered at the cavernous Great Hall of the People on the west side of Tiananmen Square.
  • 2022 June 4, Zen Soo, “Police patrol Hong Kong park amid Tiananmen vigil ban”, in AP News[16], archived from the original on 04 June 2022:
    For decades, Hong Kong and nearby Macao were the only places in China allowed to commemorate the violent suppression by army troops of student protesters demanding greater democracy in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square on June 4, 1989.
  • 2022 August 2, Patricia Zengerle, Michael Martina, “Taiwan visit caps Nancy Pelosi's long history of confronting Beijing”, in Reuters[17], archived from the original on 02 August 2022, World:
    More than 30 years ago, U.S. Representative Nancy Pelosi angered China's government by showing up in Tiananmen Square and unfurling a banner honoring dissidents killed in the 1989 protests. read more
    On Tuesday, as speaker of the House of Representatives, Pelosi disregarded China's fiery warnings and landed in Taiwan to support its government and meet with human rights activists.
  • 2022 October 8, Keith Bradsher, “China’s Communist Party Congress: What It Means for Business”, in The New York Times[18], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 08 Ocotober 2022, Dealbook Newsletter‎[19]:
    Mr. Xi drew thunderous applause in 2021 in Tiananmen Square, on the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Chinese Communist Party, when he reiterated China’s claim to Taiwan, a self-ruled island democracy.

Protest Event (1989)[edit]

1992 1994 2003 2018
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 1992, Richard Nixon, “The Pacific Triangle”, in Seize the Moment[20], Simon & Schuster, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 168:
    The global political effect of Tiananmen Square was magnified by the fact that unlike the killing of peaceful demonstrators in Lithuania in 1990 by the Soviet Black Berets, the massacre in China took place under the microscope of live international television.
  • 1994, Dan Quayle, Standing Firm: A Vice-Presidential Memoir[21], 1st edition, HarperCollins, →ISBN, page 121:
    The situation had its parallels to the one that developed in China that year: one might not be in the mood to talk with that country's leaders after Tiananmen Square, but if you really wanted to move them in the direction of democracy, and get them to restore the very rights they had trampled on, you were better off talking to them than driving them into hard-headed isolation.
  • 2003 January 9, Joseph Kahn, “Huge Demonstration in China, but Subject Is Traffic Safety”, in The New York Times[22], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 14 February 2021, World‎[23]:
    Some 10,000 people took the streets in the eastern city of Hefei this week in what appears to have been the largest student demonstration since the Tiananmen Square human rights protests of 1989.
  • 2018 February 8, Rich Lowry, “Yes, we should throw a parade”, in Politico[24], archived from the original on 08 February 2018:
    But now the best argument against Trump's parade is that it will become a cultural-war flashpoint and “the resistance” will try its utmost to ruin the affair. Just imagine a protester in a pussy hat in a Tiananmen Square-style standoff with an M1 Abrams tank.