The Cultural Revolution and its aftermath 1966-76 - detail Flashcards

1
Q

why did Mao launch the Cultural Revolution?

A
  • divisions within CCP : believed “capitalist roaders” and “bourgeois elements” infiltrated Party
  • personal slights: jealousy of Xiaoping and Shaoqi’s success
  • quest for permanent revolution in 10 points: transform Chinese culture to create “an entirely new ideology and culture… - those of the proletariat”
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2
Q

how did divisions within the CCP lead to the Cultural Revolution?

A
  • after retiring to the “second line” of politics, Mao spent time in the Forbidden City and began to distrust his old friends
  • eg Liu 1962 speech dismisses Mao’s claim that successes outweighed failures of famine by 9:1 and recognised it was caused mostly by man made disasters
  • Deng “it didn’t matter if the cat is white or black, so long as it catches rats”
  • pragmatism replaces revolutionary fervour
  • Party split between ideologues and pragmatists
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3
Q

how did personal slights lead to the Cultural Revolution?

A
  • Mao jealous of Shaoqi and Xiaoping’s successful econ policies that replaced “Walking on Two Legs”
  • Party leaders publicly state Marxism Leninism shouldn’t be surpassed by Mao Zedong Thought
  • Mao claims he’s “treated like a dead ancestor”, respected but ignored
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4
Q

how did the quest for permanent revolution lead to the Cultural Revolution?

A
  • feared party become bureaucratised and cadres had become the new ruling elite
  • permanent rev = constantly replace those in authority, never become too comfortable to exploit their power
  • demand constant class struggle to rid Party of “revisionists”
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5
Q

what was the Ten Points and why was it important?

A

1963: Mao drafted “the Early Ten Points” proposing masses should be mobilised to criticise corrupt Party cadres
- 4 Clean Ups to cleanse society of non communist ideas and
- aimed to whip up revolutionary fervour and denounce cadres at “struggle meetings”
- failure: people still recovering from famine
- Xiaoping’s “Later Ten Points” de emphasises class struggle and wants campaign to be organised by Party cadres
- Mao convinced all he worked for during revolution in danger of being dismissed by “revisionists”

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6
Q

how did Mao start the Cultural Revolution?

A
  • eliminating opponents
  • The Cultural Revolution Group
  • Yangtze River swim
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7
Q

how did Mao subtly eliminate opponents to launch Cultural Revolution?

A
  • indirectly attack well Liu and Deng
  • Han (deputy mayor of Beijing) and Zhen (mayor of Beijing), close allies of Liu and Deng forced to resign and damned as right wing “revisionists” after Mao organises a negative review of his play, containing veiled comparisons to Mao as a corrupt Emperor, to be published
  • Mao successfully eliminates 2 allies of enemies leaving them more isolated
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8
Q

what was the Cultural Revolution Group?

A
  • 17 member sub-committee of the politburo run PRC’s cultural policy
  • dominated by ideologues in “Gang of Four”:inc Boda (propaganda chief) and “cultural tsar” Madame Mao
  • propaganda campaigns call “counter revolutionaries” within the Party “our main enemy” which indirectly targets Liu and Deng
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9
Q

how did Mao return to politics to launch the Cultural Revolution?

A
  • July 1966 Yangtze River swim to prove he’s as strong as ever and to re establish his power
  • Central Committee “sixteen point directive on the Cultural Revolution” calls for “new stage of socialist revolution”
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10
Q

who were the Red Guards?

A

young people were Mao’s revolutionary soldiers
- formed violent new groups to smash “the four olds”, torture teaches and murdered atleast 1M
- Mao stated: “everything that does not fit the socialist system and the proletarian dictatorship should be attacked”

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11
Q

why did Mao have such a hold on the red guards?

A
  • indoctrinated by propaganda in education system: encouraged them to his attack enemies who were “freaks and monsters”
  • genuine appreciation for early successes of Mao’s policies: eg land reform, success in Korean War
  • young people have little recollection of Great Leap Forward + Great Famine
  • Mao made them feel important: Little Red Book stated “China’s future belongs to you”
  • China always hierarchal society based off of Confucian thought, children taught obedience in schools
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12
Q

what did Mao say about the cult of personality?

A

following Khrushchev’s denunciation of Stalin’s cult of personality, Mao disagreed arguing cults of personality depend on if the individual represents the truth and “if he does, then he should be worshipped”

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13
Q

why did the young join the Red Guards?

A
  • RG was not a monolithic movement as many young people joined for different reasons and participated with varying levels of ideological enthusiasm
  • at first the RG were the children of party cadres, so their parents told them heroic stories of Mao
  • pragmatic careerism played a role, kids whose parents had a lack of party connections were hindered, they toom the chance to remove senior communists from the hierarchy
  • children of “black elements”(bourgeois, right wingers) initially they were not allowed to join but in 1966 the restriction was lifted and these children tended to be the most violent as they were overcompensating for their family background.
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14
Q

give examples of the cult of Mao

A
  • a factory in Beijing created a ritual known as “asking for instructions in the morning and reporting back in the evening” involving a portrait of Mao
  • this became nationwide policy
  • passengers had to perform “loyalty dances” before boarding train
  • revolutionary fervour and loyalty to Mao encapsulated in the song “The East is Red”
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15
Q

mass rallies 1966

A
  • published his own big chracter posters that urged people to “bombard the headquarters”, writing a blank cheque for the Red Guards to attack those who had “enforced a bourgeois dictatorship”
  • 8 massive rallies whipped revolutionary fervour and subservient PLA leader Biao helped transport young people across the country
  • Song Binbin (student leader) places Red Guard armband on Mao, legitimises movement
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16
Q

when did Red Guard attack the 4 olds?

A

August 1966: attack “old culture” “old ideas” “old customs” “old habits”
- destroy old habits ensures bourgeois feudal class that had poisoned minds for thousands of years could no longer endure

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17
Q

examples of attacks upon the 4 olds

A
  • surgeons cancelled operations out of fear, risked being accused of “class revenge” if it went badly
  • childrens names changed to Red Glory or Face the East
  • changed meaning of traffic lights so red meant go until Enlai feared chaos and stopped them
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18
Q

examples of cultural destruction during Cultural Revolution

A
  • Confucius Temple, Shandong
  • Hai Rui’s burial site and Wu Xun
  • Qing era archway
  • Tibet
19
Q

extent of cultural destruction during Cultural Revolution

A
  • temples desecrated, statues defaced as they represented unsocialistic religious beliefs
  • Zhou send PLA to protect Forbidden City treasures
  • 1/3 libraries closed
20
Q

Confucius Temple, Shandong destruction

A
  • resting place of Confucius attacked by 200 teachers and students during 4 weeks
  • Chen Boda personally encouraged them
  • destroyed thousands of registered cultural artefaced and defaced 200 graves
21
Q

Qing era archway destruction

A
  • destroyed 200 year old Qing era archway
  • it was under Qing that the Western powers had begun to subjugate China
  • linked with national embarrassment at hands of west
22
Q

when was the Red Terror?

A

autumn winter 1966
- frenzied Red Guards subject former businessmen and landlords to denunciation to prove ideological commitment
- class enemies sent to re education camps
- intellectuals killed or took own lives to avoid this fate
- eg Lao She (Playwright) subject to struggle meetings and drowned himself in Taiping Lake to escape harassment

23
Q

growth of anarchy

A
  • red guards split into 2 factions: working class accuse non working class of becoming a new privileged class
  • motivated by political self interest, ideological commitment and desire to
    prove their loyalty
  • Mao toasts to “a nationwide all round civil war” at his birthday party
  • Mao said in “ultra democracy’ the radicals would destroy the party itself and that “won’t do” so demanded Shanghai commune be closed down
24
Q

what was the Feburary adverse current?

A

Maos’ true motive was to destroy Liu and Deng so “bombard the headquarters” meant remove his rivals, not the CCP, from power
- when the Foreign Minister and former PLA commander in chief argued against Maos’ promotion of anarchy, he criticised them as “the Feb averse current” flowing against the current tide of revolutionary upheaval

25
Q

how did Mao encourage further violence in April?

A

“the more chaos you dish out the better”
- Wuhan 1967 battles with PLA: PLA arrest 500 leaders of Red Guards for attacking party and only released them when gov send military reinforcements
- Red Guards gained control over Beijing Foreign Ministry for 2 weeks and declared creation of “proletarian internationalism” and appointed radical Chinese diplomats
- only PLA prevented Red Guarss accessing facilitates where scientists working on hydrogen bomb

26
Q

what were Revolutionary Committees?

A

Sep 1967 concerned anarchy would undermine legitimacy of Party
- “3 way alliance” of state, party and military in province run by smaller “standing comittees” and radicals only had token representation on these

27
Q

how did Mao use the PLA to restore order?

A
  • worried foreign nations would take advantage of China’s anarchy to attack the country
  • used PLA to systematically crush Red Guards
  • Mao admits to being “the black hand” crushing Red Guards
  • Cultural Rev Group launches “cleansing of the ranks” to eradicate capitalism once and for all
  • Binyang (south) villagers shot and thrown into mass graves and cannibalism (flesh, liver eaten)
28
Q

how did the cultural revolution violence end?

A

April 1969 ninth party Congress
Biao named as Maos successor
paradox: ref guards attacks on politely authority only consolidated Maos dictatorship over Chinese

29
Q

who were the targets of Mao’s attack on class enemies?

A

Sixteen Points August 1966 referred only those “within the Party… taking the capitalist road”
- soon became clear Xiaoping and Shaoqi real targets due to their pragmatic ideals that rejuvenated China

30
Q

how was Shaoqi targeted?

A

1967: his wife targeted made to wear fashionable clothes and ping pong balls to represent pearls she wore on a state visit to Indonesia infront and humiliated indront of 300k red guards
- shaoqi tortured and in solitary confinement but kept alive as a “living target” (Jiang Qings orders)
- denounced in Central comittee on flimsy evidence,died in 1968 due to penumonia due to being held in an empty unheated building
- buried in an unmarked graveb(former president of China)

31
Q

how was Xiaoping targeted?

A
  • accused of trying to establish “independent kingdom” and damned as taking “the capitalist road” and sent to tractor factory to work
32
Q

how did Lin Biao help target class enemies?

A
  • Biao impressed Mao enough to become Minister or Defence att3r Dehuai purged
  • published little red book and made it conpulsory reading for PLA soldiers
  • ensured indoctrination of the army
33
Q

how was Party membership purged?

A
  • 70-80 percent pf all party cadres purged
    -2/3 Central Committee purged
  • reeducation = May Seventh Cadre Schools indoctrination and hard labour
  • Enlai’s plea to “denounce with words not violence” ignored
  • only Mao safe: Dehuai beaten at public rallies and died of military neglect, coal minister forced to wear 60kg iron hat
34
Q

how were foreigners and capitalist roaders in China purged?

A

diplomatic immunity not respected by red guards:
- beitish embassy staff in Beijing manhandled and beaten, embassy set on fire
- French trade counsellor forced to stand in cold for 7 hours whilst being denounced
- avid American Communist Rittenberg send for re-education in May Seveneth Cadre Schools only released in 1977
- 1972: Antonioni invited to make a documentary on new China by gov but when it was released it was banned for focusing on traditional buildings, posters denounced him and ban on watching film only lifted in 2004 in China

35
Q

what happened by 1969

A

1969 Party Congress: constitution places Mao Zedong Thought as official guiding ideology of the Parry
- Biao named as official successor
-Mao essentially becomes an emperor of ultimate power

36
Q

when was the cultural revolution winding down and due to what?

A

1968-76
- “up to the mountains and down to the villages”
- rise and fall of Biao
- Xiaoping’s return to power + 4 modernisations
- Mao’s death

37
Q

what was “up to the mountains and down to the villages”?

A
  • 18M red guards “serving the people” in the countryside (mainly to prevent further anarchy)
  • schools and unis closed as part of this “rustification campaign” = China’s “lost generation” due to lack of education
  • Mao’s critical view of schools: “after studying for a few years we become more and more stupid”
  • realities of rural hardship unexpected, peasants resented sharing space with youngsters, youth become disillusioned with politics
38
Q

the rise and fall of Lin Biao

A
  • Mao’s loyalist supporter: published Little Red book, named party chairman once Mao dies
  • Mao concerned about political influence of army: 21/29 provincial rev committees headed by PLA soldiers
  • rumours Lin organises coup: perhaps working for USSR, or power hungry wife convinced him to
  • Lin flees (convinced he’ll be purged) and dies in plane crash
  • denounced as traitor after death, contrast with propaganda describing him as Mao’s “closest comrade”
  • people begin to question regime
39
Q

how did Xiaoping return to power?

A
  • 1970s: Mao’s health worsening can;t exercise, heart failing
  • Enlai, Sheng (police chief) both have cancer and other revolutionaires dead
  • Xioaping recalled from exile, his organisational skills needed after cultural rev
  • joins Politburo Standing Committee, PLA chief of staff
40
Q

what were the 4 modernisations?

A
  • Xiaoping focuses on technological development in science, defence etc
  • pragmatist: reversal of Mao’s belief in mass mobilisation
  • “if you’ve done a good job, its worth being overthrown for!” - oct 1975 speech to senior cadres
41
Q

how did the Gang of Four criticise Biao?

A
  • “criticise Lin criticise Confucius’ campaign” to mobilise masses against Deng and Enlai (Lin dead for 2 years)
  • failed: people saw Madame Mao’s motives
  • Madame Mao gets Deng removed rrom Party
42
Q

Zhou Enlai’s death

A
  • Jan 1976: 1M people pay respects
  • April: before “tomb sweeping festival”, people lay flowers at Monument to the People’s Heroes in Tiananmen Square
  • gov sends trucks to remove “bourgeois” flowers, thousands protest and are forcibly removed
43
Q

why was Deng removed from power?

A
  • Gang of 4 link Deng to Tiananmen Square “counter revolutionaries” and banish him to pig farm
  • people uninterested in another mass mobilisation campaign, do not respond to anti Deng propaganda