The Cultural Revolution I: Civil Disorder, late 1960s

Power Struggles of Early 1960s

Pragmatists

*Liu Shaoqi

Head of state

Senior vice-chairman of CCP

*Deng Xiaoping

Fence sitter?

*Zhou Enlai

Mao Zedong

Chairman of the Party

Chairman of Central Military Commission

"Treated as a dead ancestor"

Lost influence in CCP Central Committee in 1959

Bases of support

People's Liberation Army

Peng Dehuai’s criticism, 1959

Removed as Minister of Defense, 1959

Minister of Defense, 1959-

Lin Biao

Personal Popularity

*Cult of Mao

Minister of Defense, Lin Biao

Political department of the PLA

Quotations of Chairman Mao

1 billion copies, 1964-7

Propaganda Poster: “Soldiers love reading Chairman Mao’s books the most” (Skaff modified translation, 1966)

Mao buttons, songs and dances

School curriculum

The Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution Breaks Out

Mao's public policies

1) Attack "4 olds" (New Culture Movement)

Old customs, habits, culture, and thinking

Propaganda Poster: “Criticize the old world and build a new world with Mao Zedong Thought as a weapon” (1966)

2) Overthrow "capitalist roaders" within Party

Mao's motives

Reinvigorate political consciousness of people

Frustrated with "bourgeois ideology"

Regain unchallenged authority

“The Cultural Revolution was a campaign to destroy [Liu Shaoqi and Deng Xiaoping]" (Dr. Li Zhisui, The Private Life of Chairman Mao (NY: Random House, 1994), p. 470.)

Power shifts in central government

*Lin Biao named Mao's successor, August 1966

*Liu Shaoqi

Under house arrest, November 1966

Purged as "capitalist roader...renegade, traitor, scab" and agent of GMD, Oct. 1968

Died 1969

*Central Cultural Revolution Small Group, Growing influence

Founded April 1966

*Jiang Qing (Madame Mao)

Civil Disorder (1966-1968)

Descent in to Anarchy, 1966-7

*Red Guards, August 1966

Schools closed, Fall 1966

Red Guard attacks on "rightists"

Youth "Seek experiences”

How did Jung Chang travel the country and visit Beijing (chapter 18)?

“With the euphoria, fear, excitement, and tension that gripped the country, violence grew apace.” (Spence, p. 545)

“The whole country was like a pressure cooker,” Wild Swans, p. 326 (1st ed.) or p. 335 (2nd ed.)

Growing chaos, 1st half of 1967

Red Guard Factionalism

Ex: 26 August vs. Red Chengdu, Wild Swans, ch. 19

Following "the true will of Chairman Mao"

Campaign to find “capitalist roaders”

Central government loses control