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This book, first published in 1977, sets out two models of
administration and participation used in Communist China, one
worked out by the CCP during the war against Japan and one imported
from the Soviet Union in the 1950s. These models have given rise to
different policy positions, studied here, and the models provide a
framework within which to examine the nature and structure of the
CCP, state structures, the army, rural and urban policy, and the
incorporation of national minorities.
This book, first published in 1980, addresses the questions raised
by the death of Mao Zedong and the arrest of the 'Gang of Four'.
Was China reverting to a capitalist form of development, and
abandoning Mao's policies? Was China's leadership remaining loyal
to Mao's strategy but correcting damage done by the 'Gang of Four'?
The essays in this book analyse these questions and illustrate
differences in interpretation amongst the post-Mao leadership.
Individual chapters deal with disagreements over political line,
the role of the CCP, economic policy and industrial management,
policy towards the rural sector, controversies over the role of art
and literature, the nature and function of the education system and
the incorporation of China into the international economy.
This book, first published in 1981, is a study concerned with the
leadership and the people of China during the 1942-1962 period. It
analyses the attempt made by the CCP to develop new policies of
administration in the wartime base areas and the subsequent
transformation of these policies after the Communists came to
power. The problems of establishing control over China are
detailed, as are those associated with adopting the Soviet model.
The rejection of that model led to the adoption of the strategy
that led to the Great Leap Forward, and its attendant problems are
also studied here.
This book, first published in 1985, considers the state of Marxist
thought in China at the time, a time when the country's leadership
appeared more concerned with attaining modernisation and economic
development than Marxist theory. It considers the problems that
Chinese Marxist intellectuals were facing and relates them to the
actions of the political leadership. The Gang of Four, their
'utopianism' and 'dogmatism' had been denounced and this book
argues that rather than being in retreat, Chinese Marxism was in
fact enjoying a productive period.
This book, first published in 1980, addresses the questions raised
by the death of Mao Zedong and the arrest of the 'Gang of Four'.
Was China reverting to a capitalist form of development, and
abandoning Mao's policies? Was China's leadership remaining loyal
to Mao's strategy but correcting damage done by the 'Gang of Four'?
The essays in this book analyse these questions and illustrate
differences in interpretation amongst the post-Mao leadership.
Individual chapters deal with disagreements over political line,
the role of the CCP, economic policy and industrial management,
policy towards the rural sector, controversies over the role of art
and literature, the nature and function of the education system and
the incorporation of China into the international economy.
This book, first published in 1977, sets out two models of
administration and participation used in Communist China, one
worked out by the CCP during the war against Japan and one imported
from the Soviet Union in the 1950s. These models have given rise to
different policy positions, studied here, and the models provide a
framework within which to examine the nature and structure of the
CCP, state structures, the army, rural and urban policy, and the
incorporation of national minorities.
This book, first published in 1981, is a study concerned with the
leadership and the people of China during the 1942-1962 period. It
analyses the attempt made by the CCP to develop new policies of
administration in the wartime base areas and the subsequent
transformation of these policies after the Communists came to
power. The problems of establishing control over China are
detailed, as are those associated with adopting the Soviet model.
The rejection of that model led to the adoption of the strategy
that led to the Great Leap Forward, and its attendant problems are
also studied here.
This book, first published in 1985, considers the state of Marxist
thought in China at the time, a time when the country's leadership
appeared more concerned with attaining modernisation and economic
development than Marxist theory. It considers the problems that
Chinese Marxist intellectuals were facing and relates them to the
actions of the political leadership. The Gang of Four, their
'utopianism' and 'dogmatism' had been denounced and this book
argues that rather than being in retreat, Chinese Marxism was in
fact enjoying a productive period.
This study of major traumas of the 20th century in America focuses
on how the national responds to them, what those responses mean,
and how nation traumas are similar and different to personal
traumas. Coverage includes the Depression, Pearl Harbor, and the
assassinations of Kennedy and King.
This analytic overview of contemporary Chinese politics focuses on
six major themes: agriculture, urban life and industry, law and
policing, intellectuals, women and the family, and minority
nationalities.
" After a rich crop of journalistic treatments of China' s dizzying
changes in the 1980s and 1990s, publication of longer term
economic, sociological, and historical analyses of the post-Mao
period is now gathering momentum. This informative book should
emerge as one of the most important of these efforts. Addressing a
wide array of contemporary themes . . . the authors have produced a
solid, general-purpose volume of use to graduate students as well
as specialists." -- Choice
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