Synopses & Reviews
Mao
1999 saw the 50th anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic of China.
This introduction to the life and career of Mao Zedong looks back over 50 years to show how Mao established a communist party state across mainland China in 1949 in the face of apparently insurmountable odds, and what he did as its leader in the years that followed.
Shaun Breslin's lucid introduction analyses Mao from a number of angles:
as revoultionary general
as founder and leader of the world's largest nation for almost 30 years
as ideologist
as astute and often brutal political manipulator
and ultimately, as victim of his own obsession with power.
Shaun Breslin shows how Mao was driven by a determination to ensure that his revolutionary radicalism would outlive him, and how, ironically, his actions were so extreme that they undermined it - Maoism and Mao's China died with him in 1976.
Undoubtedly the best introduction to modern Chinese history and its enigmatic protagonist.
Shaun Breslin is Reader in Politics at the University of Warwick, and
convenor of the China Research programme at Chatham House. He is author of China in the 1980s: Centre-Province Relations in a Reforming Socialist State and Comparative Government and Politics: An Introduction.
Synopsis
Mao
1999 saw the 50th anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic of China.
This introduction to the life and career of Mao Zedong looks back over 50 years to show how Mao established a communist party state across mainland China in 1949 in the face of apparently insurmountable odds, and what he did as its leader in the years that followed.
Shaun Breslin's lucid introduction analyses Mao from a number of angles:
as revoultionary general
as founder and leader of the world's largest nation for almost 30 years
as ideologist
as astute and often brutal political manipulator
and ultimately, as victim of his own obsession with power.
Shaun Breslin shows how Mao was driven by a determination to ensure that his revolutionary radicalism would outlive him, and how, ironically, his actions were so extreme that they undermined it - Maoism and Mao's China died with him in 1976.
Undoubtedly the best introduction to modern Chinese history and its enigmatic protagonist.
Shaun Breslin is Reader in Politics at the University of Warwick, and
convenor of the China Research programme at Chatham House. He is author of China in the 1980s: Centre-Province Relations in a Reforming Socialist State and Comparative Government and Politics: An Introduction.
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. 206-214) and index.
Table of Contents
List of Maps.
Preface.
Note on Transliteration.
Introduction.
1. From Peasant to Power.
2. Establishing the New Political Order: Maoism and its Critics.
3. The First Major Cleavage: 1949-1957.
4. Towards the Cultural Revolution.
5. Launching the Cultural Revolution.
6. Mao and the World.
7. The Politics of De-Maoisation.
Chronology.
Glossary.
Bibliographical Essay.
Bibliography of All Works Cited in the Text.
Maps.