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The New Asia SSWH18:d;19:e; 20:d.

The New Asia SSWH18:d;19:e; 20:d. Time and Geography. POLITICAL. Mao’s China. Chairman Mao Creator of Chinese communism Believed correct path to socialism was through revolutionary peasantry Extremely distrustful of intellectuals. Mao Zedong. Mao’s China. Rural policies

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The New Asia SSWH18:d;19:e; 20:d.

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  1. The New AsiaSSWH18:d;19:e; 20:d.

  2. Time and Geography

  3. POLITICAL

  4. Mao’s China • Chairman Mao • Creator of Chinese communism • Believed correct path to socialism was through revolutionary peasantry • Extremely distrustful of intellectuals Mao Zedong

  5. Mao’s China • Rural policies • At first, regime instituted basic policies to keep control • Expropriated land, redistributed and collectivized it • Peasants did not resist, regarded government as legitimate authority • Commune became basis of rural production, government, with disastrous results; eventually abolished • Unclear responsibilities • Food production barely matched growing population; mass famine was inevitable Statue of young Mao in Changsha, the capital of Hunan

  6. Law and Government

  7. ECONOMIC

  8. China • Industrialization • Emphasized heavy industry at expense of consumer goods • Great Leap Forward • Attempt at overnight mass industrialization • Enormously costly failure • Accelerated growing gap between Chinese, Russia Backyard furnaces in China during the Great Leap Forward era.

  9. POLITICAL

  10. China • Sino-Soviet conflict • Russians criticized Mao for trying to be another “Great Father” like Stalin • Mao told Russians they had strayed from revolutionary path and that he intended to be spokesman for masses • Rift was very visible by time of Cuban Missile Crisis The Soviet T-62 tank captured by the Chinese during the 1969 clash, now on display at the Military Museum of the Chinese People's Revolution

  11. Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution • Mao wanted to create new relationship between party, people, revolutionary power • Attack aimed primarily at intellectuals • Wanted to introduce permanent, self-perpetuating revolution • Used Red Guards to rid China of reverence for tradition, make war on older generations The Chinese People's Liberation Army is the great school of Mao Zedong Thought, 1969. A poster from the Cultural Revolution, featuring an image of Chairman Mao, and published by the government of the People's Republic of China

  12. Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution • 3-4 years of barely controlled anarchy, severe damage to economy • Mao’s “Little Red Book” became required reading • Called off Red Guards, used army to handle everyday affairs • Continued tensions with Russians – Amur River War • Cultural Revolution survived until Mao’s death • Was then condemned as mistake • Party officials began putting Mao’s contributions into historical perspective Red Guards on the cover of an elementary school textbook.

  13. Recent China • Deng Xiaoping • Determined to return China to “normal” socialism • Prosperity gradually spread • Particularly interested in establishing better relations with foreign capitalists Deng Xiaoping

  14. ECONOMIC

  15. Recent China • Rise of China - an important economic power • 1984 to 2004, GDPincreased avg.9.7%/year • Fastest growing economy - world’s sixth highest • Problems: disparities in income - urban and rural • Civil servants and professionals (teachers and physicians) grossly underpaid than private sector • Public corruption pervasive problem - resentment, wealth by whatever means

  16. Recent China • China/US relations warmed • Increased interest in understanding US better • Progress in opening country to foreigners, democratizing Communist Party

  17. POLITICAL

  18. Recent China • Tiananmen Square Massacre • Spread of freedoms frightened party leaders • Students demonstrators erected a “Goddess of Democracy” statue in Beijing • China reasserted Party control, army fired and killed hundreds, perhaps thousands Chinese man blocking a line of tanks during demonstrations in Tiananmen Square

  19. US/China Relations • Have remained ambivalent • Problem areas • US military alliances with Japan, South Korea • Taiwan is particularly sore spot • Both sides have realized importance of maintaining cooperative relations • US supports China’s membership in World Trade Organization • Common ground in War on Terror US President Barack Obama shaking hands with Chinese President Xi Jinping

  20. ECONOMIC

  21. China’s Relations with Pariahs • Spectacular Industrial expansion • Aggressive international search for raw materials • Courting international pariahs, Iran and Sudan for oil • China a barrier to UN’s ability to curb Iran’s nuclear ambitions or Sudan’s genocidal actions • China (and Russia) reluctant to impose economic sanctions • China allied with US, Japan, and Russia in exerting pressure on North Korea to halt its development of nuclear bombs

  22. POLITICAL

  23. Postwar Japan to 1952 • Defeat and occupation • Constructive shock, unleashed energy and innovative thinking • Economy rebounded quickly The bombing of Nagasaki

  24. Postwar Japan to 1952 • Occupation • American-supervised under MacArthur • Native government allowed to function, but limited • Japanese accepted reform decrees in politics, social matters • Japanese accepted new basis for social, political organization • New constitution formed a government similar to British, with emperor as symbol only Gen. Douglass MacArthur

  25. Postwar Japan to 1952 • Korean War • US went from conqueror to protector • Armed forces recognized as essential for protecting disarmed Japan Crew of an M-24 tank along the Nakdong River front, August 1950

  26. Independent Japan • 1952, Japan became independent again • Signed alliance allowing US to maintain bases • Liberal party was major force in postwar politics, dominated by big business Picture of Hirohito and MacArthur

  27. ECONOMIC

  28. Independent Japan • Economic progress benefited from several developments • Spending on housing, pensions etc. instead of military • Korean War stimulated industry • Cheap oil • International credit institutions eager to lend money Cheap oil

  29. Economic Progress • Internal progress • World’s highest savings rate, reinvested in industry • Disciplined, skilled, educated labor force • Labor pool also meant larger market • Labor worked with employers rather than as adversaries • Result of government support of business • Money available for research, development • Zaibatsu re-established, more powerful than before • Industry, government made major efforts to expand foreign trade • Result was highest growth rate in the world, 1970-75 Japanese-made TV sets during the economic boom

  30. Japan 1980’s to Present • 1980s - slower rate of growth: • Competition in global markets by other Asian countries • Big loan defaults • Government-business corruption weakened capacities and self-confidence • 1990s, Japanese recession - not yet overcome; better in 2006 Japan is currently facing a recession See Notes for Video

  31. Japan 1980’s to Present Japan/China Relationship: • 1890s through World War II, Japan was an occupier and aggressor • Now, China reluctant to share world power standing with old enemy • But, competition has been peaceful, even cooperative • Each country is the other’s second biggest trading partner, but disputes over oil rights in the East China Sea • China is a nuclear and aerospace power • Japan, perhaps ominously, is starting to pursue its own nuclear and space programs China vs. Japan

  32. POLITICAL

  33. India • Severe social, economic problems, but solved politically • Nehru • Believed western-style industrialization was necessary • Also wanted to use strong hand in dealing with Pakistan, kept India on semi-war footing over Kashmir • Moderate democratic socialism, mix of state ownerships and private enterprise • Relatively successful for some, but poverty was widespread • Biggest problem was overpopulation Jawaharlal Nehru

  34. India • Indira Gandhi • First female prime minister in Asia • Dictatorial style led to conflicts, turned out of office, returned in 1980 See Notes for Video

  35. RELIGIOUS

  36. India • Increased ethnic, religious friction • Hindus and Muslims • Conflict with Pakistan nearly caused nuclear war • Sikhs demanding autonomy • Tamil, Sinhalese conflict • Democratic government has held together • Monolithic party • Army has not gotten involved in politics

  37. ECONOMIC

  38. India Today • Economic expansion on a stupendous scale • 1994-2004, GDPgrown atan average of 6.1% a year • Foresight in investments in technical and professional training for its best minds • West companies “outsourcing” skilled jobs to well-trained Indians who work for a fraction of US/European wages and benefits • Hurdles to Expansion • keeping up with the demand for highly trained graduates • electrical grid that is vulnerable to frequent shutdowns

  39. POLITICAL

  40. Pakistan and Bangladesh • West and East Pakistan created out of Muslim minority • Suffered severe handicaps • Underdeveloped countries • No infrastructure • Few leaders • East Pakistan became Bangladesh in 1971, one of poorest countries in world East and West Pakistan before 1971 See Notes for Video

  41. Pakistan and Bangladesh • East Pakistan became Bangladesh in 1971, one of poorest countries in world • Pakistan’s problems • Afghani refugees • Tribalism in north, hotbed of Islamic extremism, origins of the Taliban Taliban fighters

  42. SOCIAL/ ECONOMIC

  43. Society and Economy

  44. POLITICAL

  45. Southeast Asia since World War II • Area of stark contrasts • Areas of violence, other areas of peace • Communist governments in French Indochina • Indonesian independence was peaceful • Unsuccessful minority rebellions in Burma, Thailand

  46. Southeast Asia since World War II • Vietnam War began as nationalist rebellion against French • Ho Chi Minh’s guerrillas drove out French • Communist government established in north • US took over French role in south, installed puppet government, planned elections (never held) See Notes for Video

  47. Vietnam War • Kennedy decided to prevent communist takeover • Johnson determined to conclude what was then a small-scale war • By 1968, there were half million US troops in Vietnam • US national debate over war, sharp decline of white liberal support John F. Kennedy Lyndon Johnson

  48. Vietnam War • Nixon opted to withdraw forces • Peace signed in 1973, South Vietnamese took over their own defense • North and South united in 1975 Richard Nixon

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