1st Edition

China Since the 'Gang of Four'

Edited By Bill Brugger Copyright 1980
    284 Pages
    by Routledge

    284 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book, first published in 1980, addresses the questions raised by the death of Mao Zedong and the arrest of the ‘Gang of Four’. Was China reverting to a capitalist form of development, and abandoning Mao’s policies? Was China’s leadership remaining loyal to Mao’s strategy but correcting damage done by the ‘Gang of Four’? The essays in this book analyse these questions and illustrate differences in interpretation amongst the post-Mao leadership. Individual chapters deal with disagreements over political line, the role of the CCP, economic policy and industrial management, policy towards the rural sector, controversies over the role of art and literature, the nature and function of the education system and the incorporation of China into the international economy.

    1. The Politics of Conflict and Compromise Michael Sullivan  2. Non-Revolutionary Vanguard: Transformation of the Chinese Communist Party Graham Young  3. Industrial Development and the Four Modernisations Andrew Watson  4. Rural Policy Bill Brugger  5. The Blooming of a ‘Hundred Flowers’ and the Literature of the ‘Wounded Generation’ Sylvia Chan  6. Education – Why a Reversal? Ronald F. Price  7. China’s Foreign Relations: The Reintegration of China into the World Economy Greg O’Leary

    Biography

    Bill Burger is Middlebury’s vice president for communications and chief marketing officer. He oversees brand strategy, interactive strategy, publications, news and internal communications, video, photography, and printing and distribution operations.