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This 1973 volume is a fascinating collection of original studies on
the immediate consequences and the likely long-term effects of the
Chinese Cultural Revolution, the enormous social and political
upheaval initiated by Mao Tse-Tung in 1966. The authors discuss a
series of connected problems, all intimately related to the central
theme of leadership and participation in the Chinese pattern of
economic development and social change. The collection is edited by
Stuart Schram, who also provides a long introduction; he puts the
Cultural Revolution in the broad historical perspective of the
Chinese revolution as it has taken shape since the end of the
nineteenth century.
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Scud: The Whole Shebang (Paperback)
Rob Schrab, Dan Harmon, Mondy Carter; Artworks by Rob Schrab, Jack Grey
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R1,060
R859
Discovery Miles 8 590
Save R201 (19%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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In the world of Scud, bullets are cheaper than human life. Corner
vending machines provide any weapon you might need. The most
popular weapons are Scud disposable assassins: Robot hitmen that
self-destruct when they kill their target. This volume follows Scud
1373, assigned to take out a hideous female man-eater named Jeff.
While fighting the indestructible Jeff, Scud discovers his infamous
warning panel in a bathroom mirror. Realizing that to kill Jeff is
to kill himself, Scud blows off her arms and legs and hospitalizes
her. Her life support bills will have to be paid, and Scud will
have to find more work to stay alive.
This is a study of China from the 1800s to the present day. It focuses on China's problems of development - the decay and collapse of the Chinese Empire, its failure to recover in the first half of the twentieth century, and its rapid emergence in world affairs since the Communist Party Revolution of 1949. This new edition draws from recently opened archival research to examine economic growth, update Chinese foreign policy, and to offer a revised account of the Tiananmen Incident, also bringing the chronology up to date.
Reflections of a Punk is a series of short stories highlighting
pivotal personal experiences of Adrian Redd, a gay, black youth
growing up in the South during the 60s. They are arranged
chronologically, though each could conceivably stand alone,
focusing on some memorable aspect of Adrian's development. As this
is a first effort, it is, of course, autobiographical.
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