Webbläsaren som du använder stöds inte av denna webbplats. Alla versioner av Internet Explorer stöds inte längre, av oss eller Microsoft (läs mer här: * https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/windows/end-of-ie-support).

Var god och använd en modern webbläsare för att ta del av denna webbplats, som t.ex. nyaste versioner av Edge, Chrome, Firefox eller Safari osv.

Out-Sourcing the Inquisition: "Mass Dictatorship" in China's Cultural Revolution

Författare

Summary, in English

This paper looks at an important yet little known component of what Chinese Communist Party Chairman Mao Zedong designated the “dictatorship of the masses”—the outsourcing by the supreme state leadership of selected surveillance, inquisitorial, and other violent tasks to what in a different political system would have been regarded as simply members of the public and/or non-governmental organizations. Making use of rare archival records, the paper documents the activities in the summer of 1967 of a group of eager and enthusiastic Beijing university students tasked by the highest authority with substantiating a case of alleged treachery by Mao’s nemesis and top-priority target of his Cultural Revolution, the PRC President Liu Shaoqi. Rather than merely build a single-strand narrative around this example of mass dictatorship in action and set out to prove the complicity of members of China’s public in state-sanctioned atrocity, the paper attempts to transcend such simple dichotomizing “perpetrators vs. victims” explanatory schemes by choosing a trope that allows for multiple and alternative readings of history.

Avdelning/ar

Publiceringsår

2008

Språk

Engelska

Sidor

3-19

Publikation/Tidskrift/Serie

Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions

Volym

9

Issue

1

Dokumenttyp

Artikel i tidskrift

Förlag

Routledge

Ämne

  • History and Archaeology

Nyckelord

  • out-sourcing
  • Mao Zedong
  • Cultural Revolution
  • China
  • Red Guards

Status

Published

Projekt

  • Mass Dictatorships of the 20th Century

ISBN/ISSN/Övrigt

  • ISSN: 1469-0764