Forty years after his death, Mao remains a totemic, if divisive, figure in contemporary China. Though he retains an immense symbolic importance within China’s national mythology, the rise of a capitalist economy has seen the ruling class become increasingly ambivalent towards him. And while he continues to be a highly visible and contentious presence in Chinese public life, Mao's enduring influence has been little understood in the West.In China and the New Maoists, Kerry Brown and Simone van Nieuwenhuizen look at the increasingly vocal elements who claim to be the true ideological heirs to Mao, ranging from academics to cyberactivists, as well as at the state's efforts to draw on Mao’s image as a source of legitimacy. This is a fascinating portrait of a country undergoing dramatic upheavals while still struggling to come to terms with its past.
Kerry Brown is the professor of Chinese studies and the director of the Lau China Institute,at King’s College, London. He is an associate at the Asia Programme at Chatham House, London, and the author of eleven books on modern China, the latest of which is CEO China: The Rise of Xi Jinping.Simone van Nieuwenhuizen is based at the University of Sydney. This is her first book.
Introduction1. The Tale of the Victim, Zhang Zhixin2. The Chairman's Life after Death3. Defender of the Faith: Deng Liqun and Leftism4. Maoism in Motion: The Red Campaign of Bo Xilai in Chongqing5. Blurred Lines: Mao, the CPC and Chinese Society Today6. Mad about MaoConclusion: Mao's Second Coming
A must-read for those looking to get a better understanding of China’s recent history and its internal politics.
Kerry Brown, Kalley Wu Tzu Hui, UK) Brown, Professor Kerry (Lau China Institute, King's College London, Taiwan) Hui, Kalley Wu Tzu (Independent Scholar, Paul French