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The Unique “Blooming and Contending” 1961–62
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 February 2009
Extract
From its inception until at least the Cultural Revolution, the Communist regime in China has had a twofold aim for its intellectuals: it has sought to indoctrinate them with the exclusive ideologies of Marxism-Leninism-Maoism, and it has tried to utilize their skills to develop an industrialized and modernized society. The Chinese Communist Party has attempted to implement these two policies by an insistence on the strict orthodoxy of thinking individuals, on the one hand, and by the encouragement of intellectuals to work creatively at their jobs on the other. This contradictory approach has resulted in a policy toward the intellectuals that has been alternatively severe and relaxed. Though the main trend is usually in one direction or the other, there have always been counter-currents present which can be revived when necessary.
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- Copyright © The China Quarterly 1969
References
1 The relaxations of 1953–54 and the Hundred Flowers are discussed in the author's book Literary Dissent in Communist China, Harvard University Press, 1967.Google Scholar There have been numerous books on the Hundred Flowers movement, among them MacFarquhar, Roderick, The Hundred Flowers, London, 1960Google Scholar; and Chen, Theodore, Thought Re-form of the Chinese Intellectuals, Hong Kong, 1960.Google ScholarDoolin, Dennis wrote an article on the 1961–62 relaxation in Current Scene, Vol. II, No. 19, 1 September 1963.Google Scholar
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