Cultural Revolution Essay

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    What is “revolution”? Revolution, as defined by the Merriam-Webster dictionary, is “a sudden, extreme, or complete change in the way people live, work, etc.” (The Merriam-Webster Dictionary, 2007). When defining revolution in the Chinese context, revolution is an event where “the oppressed classes rise in revolt to seize power, destroy an old decadent social system and build a new advanced society. Revolution can destroy the old relations of production, build new ones, free up productivity and promote

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    Art can be used as an expansive instrument, as a passport to the public, and it opens up the people’s interpretative view and culture (Meldone, Sontag). Political art can pose as a threat to the government, because we see imagery as pieces of reality (Sontag). It can create a culture and can influence people’s ideals and acts. Mao Zedong recognized this and in his attempts to turn China around culturally, he needed the arts and intellectuals on his side to influence the people of China. With this

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    Revolution is a common part of life, from the relatively simple revolution of changing your individual life, to a nation becoming severing the ties that bind it to its past. Xinjiang, Chechnya, and Quebec are all areas that have experienced revolution on a massive scale. However, not all of them followed the same ideal of revolution. First, in Xinjiang, the revolution was brought about by the heavy influx of Han Chinese into the Uighurs territory. This caused them to feel marginalized politically

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    of words that build up suspense and excitement.It was published in 1997 by Harper Collins Publisher and has won many awards,such as the ALA award.The book also contains a forward by David Henry Hwang.The Red Scarf Girl will make you experience the Cultural

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    Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution were specifically the main causes of the crisis of communism and the mastermind between these two movements, Mao Zedong, can be held responsible for their initiation. The Great Leap Forward was a great economic failure. Years of famine and intense suffering came about as a result of this skewed project of Mao's. Consequently, he was sidelined in the CCP. The direct consequence of this was the Cultural Revolution, as he sought to regain

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    The Red Scarf Girl Essay

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    Girl, the author Ji-Li, Ji-Li talks about her life growing up in China during the time of the Chinese Cultural Revolution. As a young smart and talented girl, Ji-Li gets invited to audition for the Liberation Army Dance group, but unfortunately, Ji-Li is not able to audition because her family was very wealthy. Chairman Mao proposes to get rid of the Four Olds which triggers the Cultural Revolution. Ji-Li’s life turns completely upside down; she no longer can go to her school, people make fun of her

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    Impacts Of Mao Zedong

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    implemented to transform China into a modern, nation state through economical and industrial development. Subsequently in 1966, he aimed to unify the country by eliminating traditional capitalist elements present in the Chinese society through the Cultural Revolution. However,

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    China Social Inequality

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    were China’s future as a minority organization during the Cultural Revolution. This Revolution reestablished Mao’s campaign from the Great Leap Forward in 1958-1961. The Great Leap Forward was Mao’s way of restoring a Democratic society into a Communist society which was to abolish the Capitalist and traditional principles of Marxism in China. Waiting, by Ha Jin, contrasts between inequality of traditional rural

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    group of radicals such as Defense Minister Lin Biao to help him attack current party leadership to reassert the authority he had lost during the recent economic crisis and the Great Leap Forward. In 1966, Mao launched the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution (1966 – 1976). The goal of the movement was to purify Chinese society by upholdling only true Communist ideology. This was an attempt to revive the revolutionary spirit that had led to victory in the civil war decades earlier and the formation

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    Great Leap Forward. As a result, Mao Zedong was marginalized and new power arose. However, fearing that traditional chinese culture and “ bourgeois ideology” were at risk of recurrence, Mao established the Cultural Revolution as his final attempt at abolishing his concerns. The Cultural Revolution brought about many young, loyal Maoists ready to risk it all in order to establish a new regime that rid chinese society of what Mao believed to be impurities. Among these revolutionaries included Red Guards

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