Redefining Propaganda in Modern China : The Mao Era and its Legacies

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Redefining Propaganda in Modern China : The Mao Era and its Legacies

  • 言語:ENG
  • ISBN:9780367628420
  • eISBN:9781000225761

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Description

Usage of the political keyword 'propaganda' by the Chinese Communist Party has changed and expanded over time. These changes have been masked by strong continuities spanning periods in the history of the People's Republic of China from the Mao Zedong era (1949–76) to the new era of Xi Jinping (2012–present).

Redefining Propaganda in Modern China builds on the work of earlier scholars to revisit the central issue of how propaganda has been understood within the Communist Party system. What did propaganda mean across successive eras? What were its institutions and functions? What were its main techniques and themes? What can we learn about popular consciousness as a result? In answering these questions, the contributors to this volume draw on a range of historical, cultural studies, propa­ganda studies and comparative politics approaches. Their work captures the sweep of propaganda – its appearance in everyday life, as well as during extraordinary moments of mobilization (and demobilization), and its systematic continuities and discontinuities from the perspective of policy-makers, bureaucratic function­aries and artists. More localized and granular case studies are balanced against deep readings and cross-cutting interpretive essays, which place the history of the People's Republic of China within broader temporal and comparative frames.


Addressing a vital aspect of Chinese Communist Party authority, this book is meant to provide a timely and comprehensive update on what propaganda has meant ideologically, operationally, aesthetically and in terms of social experience.

Table of Contents

Notes on contributors

Acknowledgements

Introduction

James Farley and Matthew Johnson

Part I: Historical Perspectives

1. Propaganda: A Historical Perspective

David Welch

2. China’s Directed Public Sphere: Historical Perspectives on Mao’s Propaganda State

Timothy Cheek

Part II: Icons and Imagery

3. Liu Hulan – ‘A Great Life, a Glorious Death’: Martyrdom Across the Media

James Farley

4. Creating the Subtle Image of the ‘Compatriot’ 同胞 – The People of Taiwan and Hong Kong in Chinese Propaganda Posters of the Mao Era (1949-1976)

Jia Zhen 賈甄

5. Anatomy of an Emulation Campaign: "Study from Comrade Wang Guofu"

Richard King

Part III: Reception and Affect

6. Developing Patriotic Anti-Americanism: Chinese Propaganda and the Resist America, Aid Korea Campaign, 1949-53

Andrew Kuech

7. One More Time, with Feeling: Revolutionary Repetition and the Cultural Revolution Red Guard Rally Documentaries, 1966-67

Eldon Pei

Part IV: Transitions

8. Breaking with the Past: Party Propaganda and State Crimes

Puck Engman

9. From Text(s) to Image(s): Maoist-Era Texts and their Influences on Six Oil Paintings (1957-79)

Christopher A. Reed

Part V: Legacies

10. Propaganda and Security from Mao Zedong to Xi Jinping: Struggling to Defend China’s Socialist System

Matthew Johnson

11. Whose China Dream is it Anyway: Temporalities of ‘Ethnicity’ in Inner Mongolia and Xinjiang

Melissa Shani Brown and David O’Brien

12. China as ‘Third Pole’ Culture: Between Theorizing and Thought Work

Prem Poddar and Lisa Lindkvist Zhang

Selected Bibliography

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