The world turned upside down A history of the Chinese Cultural Revolution

Jisheng Yang, 1940-

Book - 2021

"The only complete history of the Cultural Revolution by an independent scholar based in mainland China, 'The World Turned Upside Down' makes a crucial contribution to understanding the Cultural Revolution and its lasting influence today"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Farrar, Straus and Giroux 2021.
Language
English
Chinese
Main Author
Jisheng Yang, 1940- (author)
Other Authors
Stacy Mosher (translator), Jian Guo, 1953-
Edition
First American edition
Item Description
Originally published in Chinese by Cosmos Books, Hong Kong, 2016.
Physical Description
xlii, 722 pages : map ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780374293130
  • Map
  • Translators' Note
  • Author's Note
  • Preface: The Road, The Theory, And The System
  • Chronology of the Cultural Revolution
  • 1. Major Events Preceding The Cultural Revolution
  • 2. Lighting The Fuse
  • 3. Removing Obstructions
  • 4. The May Conference: Formal Launch Of The Cultural Revolution
  • 5. Liu Shaoqi's Anti-Rightist Movement
  • 6. Major Incidents During The Eleventh Plenum
  • 7. The Red Guards And Red August
  • 8. Denouncing The Bourgeois Reactionary Line
  • 9. The Rise, Actions, And Demise Of Mass Organizations
  • 10. The "Workers Command Post" And Shanghai's "January Storm"
  • 11. The "February Countercurrent" And The "February Suppression Of Counterrevolutionaries"
  • 12. The Armed Forces And The "Three Supports And Two Militaries"
  • 13. "Red Through Every Hill And Vale"
  • 14. The Wuhan Incident And Mao's Strategic Shift
  • 15. The Baffling "May 16" Investigation
  • 16. The Cleansing Of The Class Ranks
  • 17. The One Strike And Three Antis Campaign
  • 18. Mass Killings Carried Out By Those In Power
  • 19. The Twelfth Plenum Of The Eighth Central Committee: Eliminating Liu Shaoqi
  • 20. The Ninth National Party Congress: From Unity To Division
  • 21. Fogged In On Lushan: The Second Plenum Of The Ninth Central Committee
  • 22. Chen Boda's Denunciation And Lin Biao's Escape Attempt
  • 23. Criticizing Lin Biao-As A Leftist Or Rightist?
  • 24. Internal Struggle During The Campaign To Criticize Lin Biao And Confucius
  • 25. From General Overhaul To The Campaign Against Deng And Right-Deviating Verdict-Reversal
  • 26. The April Fifth Movement
  • 27. The Curtain Falls On The Cultural Revolution
  • 28. China's Foreign Relations During The Cultural Revolution
  • 29. Reform And Opening Under The Bureaucratic System
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Fanatical ideology, cut-throat intrigue and vast bloodshed roil China in this sweeping history of the Cultural Revolution. Journalist Yang (Tombstone) styles the 1966--1976 upheaval as a civil war declared by dictator Mao Zedong against the Communist Party bureaucracy in order to undermine Party rivals, deflect public discontent with his disastrous policies, and achieve a purer Marxist utopia. The conflict pitted radical Red Guard groups against the Party establishment's more conservative Red Guards, and then against each other, in "large-scale armed conflicts." Whenever the chaos grew too unruly, Yang contends, Mao switched sides and backed the bureaucracy and military in suppressing radicals. Yang's sometimes disjointed narrative concentrates on leadership struggles as they played out in party conferences, backroom maneuvering, and factional propaganda couched in dreary jargon and hysterical invective. ("Thoroughly smash the bourgeois restorationist countercurrent," exhorted one slogan.) He also explores the human cost with statistics, and some appalling specifics, on the millions of people imprisoned, tortured, murdered, and, in the case of the Guangxi massacre, even cannibalized. Though not the most elegantly written--or translated--study of the Cultural Revolution, this exhaustive and sometimes horrifying account demonstrates how deranged governments become when unconstrained by democracy and individual rights. (Jan.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

The Cultural Revolution was a mass movement launched in the People's Republic of China from 1966 to 1976. In 1981, the Chinese Communist Party wrote an official history of that event interpreting it as a mistake by Mao Zedong that was taken advantage of by "counterrevolutionary cliques." Journalist Yang (Tombstone: The Great Chinese Famine, 1958-1962), the first mainland China-based independent scholar to provide a complete history of the Cultural Revolution, offers a more nuanced interpretation here. According to Yang, the revolution was a complex and chaotic situation that multiple interest groups used to try and advance their position. Liu Shaoqi (Mao's onetime designated successor), rather than being the helpless victim of the revolution as portrayed in the official history, was the leader of the bureaucratic clique. And while Liu's fate was personally disastrous, it was his clique that eventually emerged victorious over the rebel faction after the deaths of Lin Biao, Mao, and the arrests of the Gang of Four. Yang also points out that while the various factions were competing for power, it was the common people who suffered from the chaos of the Cultural Revolution. VERDICT This detailed and thoroughly researched work is essential reading for all students of modern Chinese history.--Joshua Wallace, Tarleton State Univ. Lib. Stephenville, TX

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A potent and sprawling history of the Cultural Revolution, a little-understood and catastrophic decade in modern Chinese history. Nearing 80, Yang participated in the Cultural Revolution (1966-1976) as an actor in what was called the "Great Networking" and then became a journalist for the Xinhua News Agency. As he writes in this essential history, the revolution was initiated by Mao Zedong in a purported effort to purge the Communist Party of bureaucrats and enemies of his version of permanent revolution; instead, the decade of infighting only bolstered the bureaucracy and weakened the political power of the general populace. Said one higher-up, later purged, "I was Chairman Mao's dog, and whomever he told me to bite, I bit." But Mao's greatest allies were the Red Guards, an organization--really, several organizations, sometimes at odds with each other--that had its origins in urban high schools. Imagine a political movement dominated by teenagers, and it's clear that the path will be paved with dangers. Thousands of Chinese people were murdered, their bodies buried in rice paddies or stuffed into wells, an example of the "unprecedented brutality" of the period that the author captures so well. Eventually, Mao had to conclude that the Red Guards must be reined in, an effort that led to civil war. The revolution, Yang asserts, was doomed to fail, and he is now far from the true believer of old. "Even if we allow that Mao's intentions were good," he writes, "socialism, as a form of collectivism, is predicated on the obliteration of the individual and can be achieved only through the evil of coercion." The conflict's effect was contrary indeed, serving to end the faith of most Chinese in communism. Today, Yang writes, "social injustice and lack of upward mobility are causing people in the lower rungs of society to lose hope." A comprehensive history that belongs alongside The Gulag Archipelago as a denunciation of tyranny. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.