MAO Social and Cultural Changes Flashcards

1
Q

What had first brought women more rights?

A

1911 Revolution

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2
Q

What promised the abolition of restrictions affecting women?

A

Clause 6 of the Communist Common Program of 1949

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3
Q

When was foot binding officially outlawed?

A

1911

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4
Q

Where had the Communists experimented with new marriage laws in the 1930s?

A

Jiangxi; Yanan

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5
Q

What was one of the first social changes the Communists introduced?

A

1950 Marriage Law

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6
Q

When was a second propaganda campaign launched to aid the 1950 Marriage Law?

A

1953

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7
Q

Why did the land redistribution campaign aid the advancement of women’s rights?

A

Gave women the chance to own land in their own name for the first time

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8
Q

When did women’s vulnerability increase?

A

1958-62

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9
Q

When did the family unit come under renewed attack?

A

During the Cultural Revolution

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10
Q

How many teenagers were uprooted between 1968-72?

A

12 million

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11
Q

How did the population grow under Mao’s rule?

A

From 540 million to 940 million

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12
Q

When were contraceptives made widely available?

A

1962

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13
Q

Who did Mao use to encourage women to restrict the number of children they had?

A

Female cadres in the Women’s Federation

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14
Q

When did Mao finally clarify his stance on population policy?

A

1971

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15
Q

In the first year after the Marriage Law was passed, how many women used the new divorce system?

A

Over a million

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16
Q

How did the proportion of women in the overall workforce change between 1949-76?

A

Quadrupled from 8% to 32%

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17
Q

In which areas of China had women rarely worked in the fields before the Great Leap Forward?

A

Northern areas

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18
Q

Model female worker

A

Deng Yulan in Jehol province

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19
Q

Wang Jinxi

A

‘Iron Man’ Wang Jinxi was feted for breaking China’s dependence on oil imports

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20
Q

People’s Daily

A

Acted as the mouthpiece of the Communist Party

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21
Q

By when was a national system of primary education set up with successful results?

A

Mid-1950s

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22
Q

How did the national literacy rate change between 1949-1976?

A

Rose from 20% in 1949 to 50% in 1960, and stood at 64% in 1964- by 1976, it had only risen to 70%

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23
Q

How much of the total budget went on culture and education in 1952?

A

Only 6.4%

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24
Q

When did China split away from Russia?

A

1959

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25
Pinyin
Modernised form of phonetic Mandarin, the language of most of China
26
When was Pinyin officially adopted to assist the spread of literacy?
1956
27
Why did Mandarin present a problem in assisting the spread of literacy?
Its pronunciation varied widely from region to region; it had no alphabet
28
When did schemes aiming to introduce a standardised language system become a reality?
When Zhou Yougang was asked to oversee its introduction by the Education Ministry
29
For which period were schools and universities closed?
1966-70
30
How many young people's education simply stopped between 1966-70?
130 million
31
What was a key part of Zhou's Four Modernisations?
Rebuilding confidence in the education system
32
Barefoot doctors
During the Cultural Revolution, one million medical trainees were sent to provide rudimentary medical help to the rural peasantry
33
What sort of training did the barefoot doctors undertake before they were dispatched to provide free basic health care?
6 months of intensive study, with emphasis on practical skills
34
What did barefoot doctors promote?
Simple hygiene; preventative health care; family planning
35
What was a chronic feature of rural China?
Endemic diseases (notably cholera, typhoid, dysentry, malaria and scarlet fever); high mortality rates
36
Why was the barefoot doctors campaign enforced for ideological reasons?
Exposure to peasant conditions would prevent young medical intellectuals from slipping into a bourgeois mindset
37
What helped the barefoot doctors win local confidence more readily?
Spent half their time working in agriculture, alongside the people they were looking after
38
Who paid the wages of the barefoot doctors?
Local village government
39
When did the government introduce 'patriotic health movements'?
1952
40
Patriotic health movements
Propaganda drives led by teams of Party workers who explained the importance of hygiene to the peasantry
41
What was exaggerated partly to get the first of the patriotic health movements off the ground?
Germ welfare scare during the Korean War
42
Who endorsed health schemes similar to the barefoot doctors elsewhere in the world?
World Health Organisation
43
What stated that there would be freedom of religion in the PRC?
Article 5 of the Common Program
44
What did communists view religion as?
Device used by the bourgeoisie to give false hope of a better future to the masses
45
When it came to religion, who was Mao particularly critical of?
Christian missionaries in China
46
What was the official view of religion?
Since the workers had thrown off their oppressors, there was no longer any need for religion to exist
47
How did the CCP originally deal with religion?
Set up national religious associations for each of the main religions, following the Soviet model
48
What social improvement did the communists have high hopes of, which wasn't explicitly promised in the Common Program?
Extending health care to everyone
49
What was the human waste used as fertiliser in the fields also called?
'Night soil'
50
What was one of the successes of the 'patriotic health movements'?
Reducing the death rate from waterborne diseases
51
Which insect was there also a concentrated health campaign about?
Snails that spread schistosomiasis
52
What is schistosomiasis?
Serious abdominal infection
53
What provided a useful ploy in stimulating participation in the 'four pests' campaign during the GLP?
Invoking a spirit of competition
54
Who had the best access to hospital treatment?
Urban workers in large industrial enterprises or SOEs
55
How was most medical care administered in rural areas?
County hospitals staffed by trained doctors; outpatient care provided by village health centres
56
What is the evidence that there were significant improvements in health under Mao?
Life expectancy rose from 41 in 1950 to 62 by 1970; infant mortality rates fell
57
What did Mao think that the writers, artists and musicians whose work helped to shape culture should be?
Ordinary people- their work should reflect ordinary people's concerns
58
What were clear reminders to the residents of Beijing of the political purpose behind cultural change?
Creation of the Ten Great Buildings; remodelling of Tiananmen Square in time for the 10th anniversary of the Communist accession to power
59
What were the changes made to Tiananmen Square in the space of less than a year?
Levelled and extended to accommodate over 500,000 people
60
What was the remodelled Tiananmen Square made deliberately bigger than?
Red Square in Moscow
61
What was built to accommodate the National People's Congress?
Great Hall of the People
62
When were the Ten Great Buildings rapidly constructed?
1958-59
63
What was one of the new Ten Great Buildings?
Beijing's new railway station
64
Since when had Confucian values been regarded as the main obstacle to progress?
May 1919
65
What first dealt a major blow to traditional Chinese values?
Land Reform of 1950
66
What provided the government with the ideal opportunity to put a stop to the social customs and rituals to which the peasants were accustomed?
Collectives, and then their communes
67
What did peasants in the collectives/communes find themselves attending in their leisure time?
Political meetings where the new values were reinforced; watching shows and propaganda films put on by agit-prop touring groups
68
What were examples of Jiang Qing being inconsistent when it came to her culture policies?
Most Western cultural influences were banned because of their bourgeois origins, but piano music and oil paintings were allowed because they suited her personal taste
69
What was the main result of Jiang's control?
Creativity stifled completely
70
What was the only form of theatrical entertainment available and commissioned by Jiang Qing?
A set of 8 opera ballets
71
Who was less than complimentary about the new theatre arrangement, arguing that the people wanted entertainment and variety, not battlefield scenes?
Deng Xiaoping
72
What were the main offerings of cinemas between 1966-73?
Feature films made from many of the 8 model works
73
Who had been trained by the Party to produce wall paintings promoting the GLP?
Peasant women in Huxian, in Shaanxi province
74
How many novels were published during the Cultural Revolution?
124
75
What were the main faiths practised in China pre-CCP?
Buddhism; Confucianism; Christianity; Islam; ancestor worship
76
How long had Buddhism been practised in China for?
Well over 1,000 years
77
Where did most of China's Buddhists live?
Tibet
78
Why did Buddhism come under such an intense attack?
Strategic rather than ideological reasons
79
In purely ideological reasons, how did Buddhism share some common ground with communism?
Both were atheistic; both deplored possession of material goods
80
Why did the Buddhist outlook clash with that of the communist leadership?
Its contemplative nature made its adherents potentially more difficult to mobilise in mass activity; its pacifism
81
What was the Tibetan form of Buddhism?
Lamaism
82
What did part of destroying Tibetan identity involve?
Banning Lamaism from being practised in public; replacing the Tibetan language with Mandarin
83
When was there a mass uprising against Chinese rule in Tibet?
1959
84
Who was particularly targeted in the PLA's attempt to quell the 1959 Tibet uprising?
Buddhists
85
If Buddhist monasteries wanted to remain open after the Tibet uprising, what did they have to do?
Come under the control of the Chinese Buddhist Association
86
Where did the Dalai Lama flee to after the Tibet uprising?
Northen India
87
How many Tibetan monasteries were destroyed during the Cultural Revolution?
6,000
88
How long had Confucian ideas dominated Chinese philosophy for?
2,500 years
89
What was the Confucian approach to life?
To make society as harmonious as possible by showing respect for legitimate authority
90
Since the early 20th century, who had Confucianism come under attack from?
Intellectuals, who blamed it for China's weaknesses
91
Why is Confucianism not technically classed as a religion?
No god, church or clergy; no concern with the afterlife
92
What did communist propaganda denounce Confucianism as representing?
All that was bad with China's past
93
When had Christianity established a foothold in China?
By the 19th century
94
After 1949, what quickly drove most Protestant missionaries out of the country?
Fear of arrest; accusations of espionage
95
What put Catholic missionaries in a difficult position in China after 1949, compared to the Protestant missionaries?
Pope's insistence that they stay
96
What did the Communists create to make themselves appear tolerant when it came to Christianity?
Patriotic Churches
97
Patriotic Churches
Such churches lost all independence, the state having the right to appoint the clergy and dictate doctrine
98
What did the Protestant Church come under the authority of?
Three Self Patriotic Movement in 1953
99
When did some Catholics reluctantly follow the Protestant's surrender in 1953?
1957
100
Which were the provinces in which most Chinese Muslims lived?
North-western provinces of Xinjiang, Gansu and Qinghai
101
Who was Xinjiang home to?
Uighur, Kazakh, Hui and Kirghiz peoples, all of whom resented Chinese rule
102
What is the core belief of ancestor worship?
There is a reciprocal relationship between the living and the dead
103
What does ancestor worship overlap heavily with?
Confucianism
104
What did the Communists do to ancestor worship in public?
Condemned it as a superstition that was no longer acceptable in the new China, as it focused on the past
105
What was Mao's opinion on population policy?
Birth rate should be reduced to 2%
106
Why was Mao particularly critical of Christian missionaries in China?
They were a reminder of the West's attempts to colonise China in the 19th century
107
How did the patriotic health movements reduce the number of deaths from waterborne diseases?
Encouraged the digging of deeper wells for obtaining drinking water; promoted more careful disposal of waste in pits away from homes
108
What did the opera ballets commissioned by Jiang Qing contain?
Triumph of heroic workers over their class oppressors
109
Why were the Communists so focused on destroying the family as a social unit?
Family relations embodied Confucian values; existence of family encouraged a bourgeoisie mindset
110
Why were the impacts of social reforms for women limited?
Merely passing laws is not enough to alter deeply ingrained attitudes
111
How was the PLA instructed to treat women?
With respect
112
When was the 1950 Marriage Law drafted?
During the civil war
113
How was the 1950 Marriage law effectively imposed?
With a huge propaganda campaign; through posters and leaflets
114
Why were the gains of women from the land redistribution campaign of 1950 short-lived?
Due to the compulsory collectivisation scheme a few years later
115
Why were the communes theoretically supposed to be beneficial for women?
They would provide canteens, laundries and kindergartens to free women from domestic chores
116
Why were women in agriculture put at a serious advantage compared to men?
Typically, they earned fewer work points than men because of the nature of agricultural work
117
What is an example of the divorce rate rising over the famine years?
Rose by 60% in Gansu province
118
How did the communes aim to destroy traditional family life?
By reducing women's roles as mothers and family raisers
119
Who were the main victims of the 1958-62 famine?
Very young; very old
120
Which period of Mao's China worsened the position of women?
Cultural Revolution
121
What did the growth in numbers of working women owe much to?
Expansion of industry and the services sector in the 1FYP
122
When were some of the prejudices about women doing farm work weakened?
When they stepped in to the fill labour shortages caused by the mass mobilisation of men on construction projects
123
Why did Mao strive for a more educated society?
Economic progress depended on China producing its own technical specialists; communist ideas could be spread more quickly among literate people
124
Why did Mao believe that the health of China need to improve?
A healthy workforce would be more productive; successful health policy would provide major propaganda opportunities
125
How many children aged 7-16 were in full-time education by 1956?
Less than 1/2
126
What was education like after the CR?
Greater emphasis on practical and vocational training; fewer exams to be taken
127
What were the wages of the barefoot doctors like?
Roughly 1/2 of those of a traditionally trained urban doctor
128
How many villages were involved in the barefoot doctors scheme by 1976?
90%
129
What can the 'patriotic health movements' be seen as?
Mass mobilisation
130
What were many Buddhist monasteries turned into?
Army barrracks; adminastrative buildings
131
Why did the government respond so harshly to the outpouring of grief at Zhou Enlai's death?
It seemed like a revival of ancestor worship