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Death and Transfiguration: Liu Shaoqi's Rehabilitation and Contemporary Chinese Politics
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 March 2011
Abstract
Liu Shaoqi, the highest-ranking Chinese Communist leader to fall victim to China's Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution, was posthumously rehabilitated in spring 1980. His rehabilitation was accompanied by the publication of new materials on his life and career, enabling us to fill in various lacunae and to attempt a more comprehensive assessment of his political import. If the vindication is successful among China's still somewhat skeptical masses, Liu may come to serve as a popular symbol of the folly of spontaneous mass participation in politics and the essential continuity of China's Marxist-Leninist tradition from the 1950s to the 1980s. To China's officialdom, Liu will represent the ultimate integrity of the Party apparatus, an avatar of the self-cultivated rectitude of the “clean official.”
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References
1 The official media of the People's Republic of China (PRC) (People's Daily, Red Flag. Guangming Ribao, the revived Wen Hui Bao, etc.) I have taken to be definitive on matters of fact in this study. Of the Hong Kong publications, Ming Pao Yueh Kan and Qishi Niandai seem to be most reliable. Zheng Ming, Dongxiang, and Guang Jiao Jing I have found for the most part to be accurate, although they do report hearsay and even rumor of uncertain reliparticularly ability. Thus I have attempted to corroborate their claims against other sources whenever possible.
2 Shengsan, Cao, “Mao Liu jiaxiang zhuan fang tuo” (A visit to the hometowns of Mao and Liu), Zheng Ming, April 1980, no. 30, pp. 22–26Google Scholar.
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36 Agence France Presse, Jan. 28, 1979, in FBIS, Jan. 29, 1979, p. E15; see also fn. 34.
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42 Ibid.
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48 Beijing Ribao, March 4, 1980, p. 1, in FBIS, March 4, 1980, p. L3; Xinhua (Beijing), April 5, 1980, in FBIS, April 7, 1980, p. LI.
49 Xinhua (Beijing), May 21, 1980, in FBIS, May 21, 1980, pp. Ll–2.
50 Beijing Ribao, March 1, 1980, in FBIS, March 3, 1980, pp. L5–6.
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55 On June 30, 1927, Chen Duxiu, in his “Decision Concerning the Relations Between the CCP and the KMT,” wrote that: “There are armed pickets in Wuhan, but in order to avoid political conflict and misunderstanding, we can either rediscussion duce the number of pickets or form them into the army (the KMT army).” Quoted in Lu Zhongjian, ibid.
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