Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-ndw9j Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-06T05:23:11.236Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Nanjing's “Second Cultural Revolution” of 1974*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 November 2012

Guoqiang Dong
Affiliation:
Nanjing University. Email: [email protected]
Andrew G. Walder*
Affiliation:
Stanford University.
*
Email: [email protected] (Corresponding author).

Abstract

China experienced extensive civil strife in 1974, as elite factionalism during the “criticize Lin Biao and Confucius” campaign revived popular contention in the provinces. Past research has characterized these conflicts as a “second Cultural Revolution” – an offensive by resurgent red guards and rebels to resist the restoration of purged civilian officials to powerful posts. In Nanjing, however, the conflicts were of an entirely different nature. Civilian cadres directed the campaign against army officers who still dominated civilian government throughout the province. Popular protests in Nanjing were not led by former rebels, whose ranks had been decimated by unusually harsh military suppression campaigns, but were instead protests by ordinary citizens who had suffered in the purges and rustication campaigns of the late 1960s. While the campaign in cities like Hangzhou and Wuhan was an offensive by resurgent rebels against civilian officials, in Nanjing civilian officials used the campaign to ensure their victory over military rivals. The Hangzhou and Wuhan pattern revived the politics of the 1960s, while the Nanjing pattern anticipated the protests against Cultural Revolution abuses characteristic of the end of the Mao era.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 2012 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

This article is a product of the Jiangsu Cultural Revolution Research Project, supported by the Nanjing University Humanities Fund.

References

An, Jianshe. 2004. “Mao Zedong yu ‘pi Lin pi Kong’ ruogan wenti kaoshu” (“An examination of several questions about Mao Zedong and ‘pi Lin pi Kong’”). Dang de wenxian 4 (April), 5563.Google Scholar
Brodsgaard, Kjeld Erik. 1981. “The democracy movement in China, 1978–1979: opposition movements, wall poster campaigns, and underground journals.” Asian Survey 21, 747774.Google Scholar
CCP Central Committee. 1972. “Zhonggong zhongyang, zhongyang junwei guanyu zhengxun dui sanzhi liangjun wenti de yijian tongzhi” (“Notice of the CCP Central Committee and Central Military Commission on questions about the problem of the three supports and two militaries”), Central Document No. 32, 21 August.Google Scholar
CCP Central Committee. 1974. “Zhonggong zhongyang guanyu zhua geming cu shengchan de tongzhi” (“CCP Central Committee notice on grasping revolution and promoting production”), 1 July 1974.Google Scholar
Chan, Anita, Rosen, Stanley, and Unger, Jonathan, eds. 1985. On Socialist Democracy and the Chinese Legal System: The Li Yizhe Debates. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe.Google Scholar
Lixu, Chen. 1996. “‘Jiu yi san shijian’ hou kending yu fouding ‘wen'ge’ de douzheng yu Mao Zedong de xintai” (“The struggle to affirm and repudiate the ‘Cultural Revolution’ after the September 13 incident and Mao Zedong's attitude”), Mao Zedong sixiang yanjiu 1 (January), 135140.Google Scholar
Cheng, Zhensheng. 2005. “Mao Zedong tichu ‘yao ba guomin jingji gaoshangqu’” (“Mao Zedong calls for ‘improving the national economy’”). Dang de wenxian 2 (February), 4243.Google Scholar
Ding, Qun. 1999. Liu Shunyuan zhuan (Biography of Liu Shunyuan). Nanjing: Jiangsu renmin chubanshe.Google Scholar
Dong, Guoqiang and Walder, Andrew G.. 2012. “From truce to dictatorship: creating a revolutionary committee in Jiangsu.” The China Journal 68, 131.Google Scholar
Dong, Guoqiang and Walder, Andrew G.. 2011. “Local politics in the Chinese Cultural Revolution: Nanjing under military control.” Journal of Asian Studies 70, 425447.Google Scholar
Forster, Keith. 1986. “The politics of destabilization and confrontation: the campaign against Lin Biao and Confucius in Zhejiang province, 1974.” The China Quarterly 107, 433462.Google Scholar
Forster, Keith. 1990. Rebellion and Factionalism in a Chinese Province: Zhejiang, 1966–1976. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe.Google Scholar
Forster, Keith. 1992. “Spontaneous and institutional rebellion in the Cultural Revolution: the extraordinary case of Weng Senhe.” Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs 27, 3975.Google Scholar
Garside, Roger. 1981. Coming Alive! China After Mao. New York: McGraw–Hill.Google Scholar
Goldman, Merle. 1975. “China's Anti–Confucian campaign, 1973–74.” The China Quarterly 63, 435462.Google Scholar
Goodman, David S.G. 1981. Beijing Street Voices: The Poetry and Politics of China's Democracy Movement. London: Marion Boyars.Google Scholar
Heilmann, Sebastian. 1993–1994. “The social context of mobilization in China: Factions, work units, and activists during the 1976 April Fifth movement.” China Information 8, 119.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heilmann, Sebastian. 1996. Turning Away from the Cultural Revolution: Political Grass-Roots Activism in the Mid-Seventies, Occasional Paper 28. Stockholm: Center for Pacific Asia Studies, Stockholm University.Google Scholar
Jiangsu Province Chronology. 1988. Jiangsu sheng dashiji (1949–1985)(Chronology of Jiangsu Province [1949–1985]). Nanjing: Jiangsu renmin chubanshe.Google Scholar
Jiangsu Provincial Annals. 2001. Jiangsu sheng zhi. Dashiji (Jiangsu Provincial Annals: Chronology). Nanjing: Jiangsu guji chubanshe.Google Scholar
Jiangsu Provincial Annals. 2002. Jiangsu sheng zhi. Zhonggongzhi (Jiangsu Provincial Annals: Communist Party Annals). Nanjing: Jiangsu guji chubanshe.Google Scholar
Li, Changwen. 1974. “Pipan Wu Dasheng tongzhi deng ren de zongpai zhuyi, fenlie zhuyi, wei quanmian luoshi Mao zhuxi de wuqi zhishi er douzheng” (“Criticize the factionalism and splittism of those like comrade Wu Dasheng, struggle to fully implement Chairman Mao's May 7 directive”). Shengji jiguan pi Lin pi Kong dahui fayan, 14 December 1974, 40–43.Google Scholar
Li, Zhirong. n.d. Shi nian dongluan qijian de Nanjing (Nanjing during the Decade of Turmoil). Draft manuscript.Google Scholar
Liu, Dinghan, ed. 1999. Dangdai Jiangsu jianshi (Brief History of Contemporary Jiangsu). Beijing: Dangdai Zhongguo chubanshe.Google Scholar
Louie, Genny, and Louie, Kam. 1981. “The role of Nanjing University in the Nanjing Incident.” The China Quarterly 86, 332348.Google Scholar
MacFarquhar, Roderick, and Schoenhals, Michael. 2006. Mao's Last Revolution. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Nanjing Archives Bureau. 1985. Nanjing “wenhua da geming” dashiji (Chronology of the “Great Cultural Revolution” in Nanjing). Nanjing: Nanjing shi dang'an guan. Mimeographed pre-publication draft.Google Scholar
Nanjing Conference Compilation. 1974. Zhonggong Nanjing shiwei changwei (kuoda) huiyi jiefa pipan cailiao huibian (Compilation of Criticism and Exposure Materials from the Conference of the (Enlarged) Standing Committee of the Nanjing Municipal Party Committee). Zhonggong Nanjing shiwei cailiaozu bian, 20 November.Google Scholar
Pan, Zhuping. 2007. “Jiangsu qingcha ‘wuyiliu’ yuan'an” (“Jiangsu's investigations of ‘May 16’ false cases”). Yanhuang chunqiu 11 (November), 6366.Google Scholar
Perry, Elizabeth J., and Xun, Li. 1997. Proletarian Power: Shanghai in the Cultural Revolution. Boulder, CO: Westview.Google Scholar
Politiburo Instructions. 1974. “Zhongyang zhengzhi ju lingdao tongzhi dui Jiangsu shengwei, Nanjing junqu fuzeren de zhishi” (“Instructions by leading comrades of the Politburo to the leaders of the Jiangsu provincial Party committee and Nanjing Military Region”), 13 November.Google Scholar
Qian, Yongqing. 1974. “Jiefa pipan Wu Dasheng duikang zhongyang zhishi, ju bu jiaodai yu Lin Biao ji sidang yinmou huodong you qianlian de wenti” (“Expose and repudiate Wu Dasheng's resistance to central directives, and his refusal to confess his involvement with conspiratorial activities of Lin Biao and his diehard followers”). Shengji jiguan pi Lin pi Kong dahui fayan, 5 July, 33–37.Google Scholar
Rosen, Stanley. 1985. “Guangzhou's democracy movement in Cultural Revolution perspective.” The China Quarterly 101, 131.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Teiwes, Frederick C., and Sun, Warren. 2007. The End of the Maoist Era: Chinese Politics during the Twilight of the Cultural Revolution, 1972–1976. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe.Google Scholar
Xiaopeng, Tong. 1996. “Zhou Enlai zai ‘pi Lin pi Kong’ zhong” (“Zhou Enlai during ‘criticize Lin and Confucius’”). Lingdao wencui 12 (December), 4852.Google Scholar
Wang, Chunnan. N.d. “Canjia pi Lin pi Kong yundong” (“Participating in the campaign to criticize Lin and Confucius”). Unpublished manuscript.Google Scholar
Wang, Shaoguang. 1995. Failure of Charisma: The Cultural Revolution in Wuhan. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Wang, Xiaozhi, Huaming, Yu and Chunnan, Wang. 1974. “Zongguan Jiangsu wa ‘wuyiliu’ zhizhan—sanping Jiangsu qingcha yundong de da fangxiang” (“Do an overall survey of Jiangsu's battle to dig out ‘May 16’: three assessments of the broad direction of the Jiangsu investigation movement”). Mimeo., 18 April.Google Scholar
Wang, Xuezhou. 1974. “Jianjue tuanjie tongyi, fandui fenlie - pipan Wu Dasheng tongzhi deng ren gao duli wangguo de yanzhong cuowu” (“Firmly strengthen unity, oppose splits: criticize the severe error of those like Wu Dasheng who create independent kingdoms”). Shengji jiguan pi Lin pi Kong dahui fayan, 14 December, 2731.Google Scholar
Xinhua ribao . 1974a. “Laolao zhangwo pi Lin pi Kong zhege douzheng dafangxian, chedi jiekai shengwei jieji douzheng he luxian douzheng gaizi” (“Firmly grasp the main orientation of the struggle to criticize Lin Biao and Confucius, throughly tear the lid off of the class struggle and line struggle on the Provincial Party Committee”), 11 May, 1.Google Scholar
Xinhua ribao . 1974b. “Sheng zong gonghui, sheng pinxie, sheng fulian, tuanshengwei lianhe zhaokai pi Lin pi Kong dahui, chedi qingsuan Lin Biao jiqi sidang zai Jiangsu de zuixing” (“Provincial workers, poor peasant, women's and youth organizations hold joint meetings to criticize Lin Biao and Confucius, thoroughly settle accounts with the crimes of Lin Biao and his diehard followers in Jiangsu”), 11 May, 1 and 3.Google Scholar
Xinhua ribao . 1974c. “Nanjing daxue he shengji jiguan xuanchuan xitong fenbie zhaokai dahui, jiefa he shengtao Lin Biao jiqi sidang zai Jiangsu de zuixing” (“Nanjing University and provincial level propaganda system hold separate mass meetings to expose and denounce the crimes of Lin Biao and his diehard followers in Jiangsu”), 11 May, 1 and 3.Google Scholar
Xu, Huaimeng. 1974. “Pipan Wu Dasheng tongzhi deng ren zai jiben jianshe zhanxian shang tuixing xiuzheng zhuyi luxian” (“Criticize those like comrade Wu Dasheng who carried out a revisionist line in the battle for basic construction”). Shengji jiguan pi Lin pi Kong dahui fayan, 14 December, 37–39.Google Scholar
Yu, Weiqun. 1974. “Jiefa pipan Wu Dasheng pohuai gaoxiao pi Lin pi Kong” (“Expose and criticize Wu Dasheng's sabotage of the campaign to criticize Lin Biao and Confucius in higher education”). Jiefa pipan Wu Dasheng “san pohuai' deng wenti, Jiangsu shengwei shengji jiguan ganbu pi Lin pi Kong huiyi mishuzu bianyin, 5 July, 22–26.Google Scholar
Yuan, Gang. 2008. Fengyu ba nian (Eight Years' Storm). Nanjing: Privately published.Google Scholar
Zhou, Xilu. 1974. “Pipan Wu Dasheng tongzhi dengren dizhi dang de jiben jianshe luxian, pohuai shuidian zhanxian de geming he shengchan” (“Criticize comrade Wu Dasheng and others who resisted the Party line on basic construction, and sabotaged revolution and production on the hydropower front”). Shengji jiguan pi Lin pi Kong dahui fayan, 14 December, 12–16.Google Scholar
Zhou, Zhihua. 1974. “Pipan Wu Dasheng tongzhi deng ren fenlie zhuyi de ganbu luxian” (“Criticize the splittist cadre policy of those like comrade Wu Dasheng”). Shengji jiguan pi Lin pi Kong dahui fayan, 14 December, 1–6.Google Scholar
Zhu, Tonghua. 1974. “Jiefa pipan Wu Dasheng pohuai shehui zhuyi jihua jingji” (“Expose and repudiate Wu Dasheng's sabotage of the socialist planned economy”). Shengji jiguan pi Lin pi Kong dahui fayan, 5 July, 11–15.Google Scholar
Zweig, David S. 1978. “The Peita debate on education and the fall of Teng Hsiao-p'ing.” The China Quarterly 73, 140159.Google Scholar