Party Leadership and Revolutionary Power in China
Originally published in 1970, this volume consists of essays by twelve leading scholars from the United States and Britain, all of whom concentrated their studies on the problems of China. Their papers were originally written for a conference on the Chinese Communist Party, held at Ditchley Park, England, in July 1968. During the discussions, a number of themes emerged as the factors governing the evolution of the Party. These related to problems of leadership, power and the revolutionary struggle within the Party and their effect on Chinese society. The authors subsequently revised their papers, highlighting these problems within the realm of their own subject, ranging from the power elite and the Central Committee to the village leadership and the role of the Army. The editor, in his introduction, throws further light on the leadership and power struggle, on Mao's role and on the effects of the Great Cultural Revolution.
1028455248
Party Leadership and Revolutionary Power in China
Originally published in 1970, this volume consists of essays by twelve leading scholars from the United States and Britain, all of whom concentrated their studies on the problems of China. Their papers were originally written for a conference on the Chinese Communist Party, held at Ditchley Park, England, in July 1968. During the discussions, a number of themes emerged as the factors governing the evolution of the Party. These related to problems of leadership, power and the revolutionary struggle within the Party and their effect on Chinese society. The authors subsequently revised their papers, highlighting these problems within the realm of their own subject, ranging from the power elite and the Central Committee to the village leadership and the role of the Army. The editor, in his introduction, throws further light on the leadership and power struggle, on Mao's role and on the effects of the Great Cultural Revolution.
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Party Leadership and Revolutionary Power in China

Party Leadership and Revolutionary Power in China

by John Wilson Lewis (Editor)
Party Leadership and Revolutionary Power in China

Party Leadership and Revolutionary Power in China

by John Wilson Lewis (Editor)

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Overview

Originally published in 1970, this volume consists of essays by twelve leading scholars from the United States and Britain, all of whom concentrated their studies on the problems of China. Their papers were originally written for a conference on the Chinese Communist Party, held at Ditchley Park, England, in July 1968. During the discussions, a number of themes emerged as the factors governing the evolution of the Party. These related to problems of leadership, power and the revolutionary struggle within the Party and their effect on Chinese society. The authors subsequently revised their papers, highlighting these problems within the realm of their own subject, ranging from the power elite and the Central Committee to the village leadership and the role of the Army. The editor, in his introduction, throws further light on the leadership and power struggle, on Mao's role and on the effects of the Great Cultural Revolution.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780521096140
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 07/02/1970
Series: Contemporary China Institute Publications
Pages: 432
Product dimensions: 4.90(w) x 7.90(h) x 1.20(d)

Table of Contents

Preface Stuart R. Schram; Introduction John Wilson Lewis; Acknowledgements; Part I. The Changing Role of the Communist Party in the Revolutionary Struggle: 1. The influence of the past: how the early years helped to shape the future of the Chinese Communist Party C. Martin Wilbur; 2. Transfer of legitimacy in the Chinese Communist Party: origins of the Maoist myth William F. Dorrill; 3. The roles of the monolithic party under the totalitarian leader Leonard Schapiro and John Wilson Lewis; Part II. The Power Elite in Theory and Practice: 4. The reign of virtue: some broad perspectives on leader and Party in the Cultural Revolution Benjamin I. Schwartz; 5. The Party in Chinese Communist ideology Stuart R. Schram; 6. Factionalism in the Central Committee Philip Bridgham; Part III. The Communist Party and Chinese Society After the Take-Over: 7. Keeping the revolution going: problems of village leadership after land reform Thomas P. Bernstein; 8. Party policies towards the intellectuals: the unique blooming and contending of 1961–2 Merle Goldman; 9. Getting ahead and along in Communist China: the ladder of success on the eve of the Cultural Revolution Michel Oksenberg; Part IV. The New View of Power in the Cultural Revolution Donald W. Klein; 11. Army-Party relations in the light of the Cultural Revolution John Gittings; Contributors; Index.
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