Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Preface
- Foreword
- Abbreviations
- PART ONE THE MODERN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
- PART TWO POLITICAL LIFE
- 2 Political mobilization in Shanghai, 1949–1951
- 3 Shanghai and Chinese politics: before and after the Cultural Revolution
- 4 Shanghai dockers in the Cultural Revolution: the interplay of political and economic issues
- 5 The Shanghai Connection: Shanghai's role in national politics during the 1970s
- PART THREE ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND LIVING-STANDARDS
- PART FOUR THE SUBURBAN TRANSFORMATION
- PART FIVE CULTURE AND IDEOLOGY
- Notes
- A chronology of modern Shanghai, 1842–1979
- Contributors
- Index
2 - Political mobilization in Shanghai, 1949–1951
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Preface
- Foreword
- Abbreviations
- PART ONE THE MODERN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
- PART TWO POLITICAL LIFE
- 2 Political mobilization in Shanghai, 1949–1951
- 3 Shanghai and Chinese politics: before and after the Cultural Revolution
- 4 Shanghai dockers in the Cultural Revolution: the interplay of political and economic issues
- 5 The Shanghai Connection: Shanghai's role in national politics during the 1970s
- PART THREE ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND LIVING-STANDARDS
- PART FOUR THE SUBURBAN TRANSFORMATION
- PART FIVE CULTURE AND IDEOLOGY
- Notes
- A chronology of modern Shanghai, 1842–1979
- Contributors
- Index
Summary
THE REVOLUTION MOVES TO THE CITY
When the People's Liberation Army captured China's major cities in 1948 and 1949, the Chinese Communist Party encountered a host of new problems peculiar to urban environments. The tasks of administration, reconstruction, and revolutionary transformation provided a challenge to the Communists unlike those they had faced in winning state power. Recognizing the difficulty of these tasks, the Communists approached them warily.
The Party's official attitude toward the cities of China was mixed, reflecting mixed recollections of its previous urban activities. After initial success in the cities, especially in organizing workers, the Party suffered a crippling blow in Chiang Kai-shek's coup of April 1927.Within a few years, the Party leadership was driven from the cities, eventually to seize power primarily through a peasant based rural revolution. Throughout twenty years of struggle in the countryside, however, the Party maintained links with its underground organizations in urban areas. It never abandoned the goal of returning to the cities. In a report delivered in March 1949 at the Seventh Plenary Session of the Party Central Committee, Mao Tse-tung identified urban work as the Party's main task:
From 1927 to the present the centre of gravity of our work has been in the villages… The period for this method of work has now ended. The period of ‘from the city to the village’ and of the city leading the village has now begun The centre of gravity of the Party's work has shifted from the village to the city.
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- ShanghaiRevolution and Development in an Asian Metropolis, pp. 35 - 65Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1981
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