Monday, April 20, 2020
Power And Propoganda In Communist China Essays - Chinese Communists
  Power and Propoganda in Communist China    Propagand in China during the Cultural Revolution took on many   forms; there were mass Red Guard demonstrations in Tianamen Square in   support of Mao Zedong, pictures of Mao were put up in every   conceivable location from restaurants to the wallpaper in nurseries,   and pamphlets and books of Mao's teachings were distributed to every   Chinese citizen. One of these propaganda publications Quotations from   Chairman Mao which later became known as the Little Red Book contained   quotes from Mao Zedong and was distributed to every Chinese citizen.   The history of the Red Book provides one of the best ways in which to   analyze Chinese propaganda during the Cultural Revolution and see the   ways in which the Chinese government was able to produce and   effectively indoctrinate the Chinese people with Mao Zedong Thought.   Official Chinese magazines from the period of 1967 to 1970 are filled   with many pictures of citizens holding, reading, and memorizing the   Red Book. This proposal will trace the rise and fall of images of the   Red Book in the official Chinese publication China Reconstructs. This   proposal will use a graphical analysis of pictures in this publication   from 1966 to 1973 to show that propaganda was not just a tool of the   Communist party but also a reflection of internal power struggles   within the party during the Cultural Revolution.     The Red Book was written several years before it became the   object of national adoration and a tool for the Cultivation of Mao's   personality Cult. The history of the Red Book and its meteoric rise   from a hand book for military recruits to compulsory reading for all   Chinese citizens, is closely tied to its developer Lin Biao's rise to   power. Lin Biao was born in 1907 and was fourteen years younger then   Mao; he joined the communist party in 1925 and until the communists   captured control of China was at various times in charge of resistance   forces, and armies of communist soldiers. When the communists took   control in 1949 Lin Biao was behind Mao Zedong, Liu Shaoqi, Zhou   Enlai, Chen Yun, and Deng Xiaoping in rank (Yan and Gao, 1996: 179).   But eighteen years later during the height of the Cultural Revolution   Lin Biao by winning favor with Mao by publishing and championing the   Red Book and the Cult of Mao became second only to the Chairman in   power and position (Ming-Le, 1983: 80).      In 1959 Peng Dehua was dismissed as minister of defense and Lin   Biao was appointed in his place. At an armed forces meeting for high   cadres during September of that year Lin Biao, energetically started   promoting the Cult of Mao saying, "Learning the writings of comrade   Mao Zedong is the shortcut to learning Marxism-Leninism. Chairman   Mao's writings are easy to learn and can be put to use immediately.   Diligent work will pay dividends many fold." (Yan and Gao, 1996: 182)   His references to "shortcut" and "quick dividends" in his speech went   unnoticed at the time as few foresaw the effects of creating a  Cult around Mao. But looking back on the Cultural Revolution and Lin   Biao, we can see his using the Cult of Mao was indeed a shortcut that   produced huge dividends both for himself and for Mao.      Mao to the Chinese people was a symbol sovereignty and the   construction of socialism; to them praise for Mao was fitting with his   symbolic role in society. Starting in 1959 Lin Biao in front of   military audiences in order to help buildup support for the Cult of   Mao used such phrases as, "the dire necessity of acquiring Mao   Zedong's thought," "to study the writings of Mao Zedong with questions   in mind is to shoot arrows with target in sight," "we must arm our   minds with Mao Zedong's thought" (Yan an Gao, 1996: 181). Lin Biao's   goal of building up both himself and the Cult of Mao lead him in   September of 1960 to pass a resolution at the meeting of the Military   Commission, which called for more political education among the armed   forces (Yan and Gao, 1996: 181)      "Mao Zedong Thought is the compass for the Chinese people's      revolution and socialist construction, the powerful ideological      weapon against imperialism, and the powerful ideological weapon      against revisionism    
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