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THE HUNDRED FLOWERS CAMPAIGN

THE HUNDRED FLOWERS CAMPAIGN. 1956-57. By W. A. Boyce. 'The Hundred Flowers Campaign'. Where does the term originate?. ‘Let a hundred flowers blossom, let a hundred schools of thought contend ’. What does it actually mean???.

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THE HUNDRED FLOWERS CAMPAIGN

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  1. THE HUNDRED FLOWERS CAMPAIGN 1956-57 By W. A. Boyce

  2. 'The Hundred Flowers Campaign' Where does the term originate? ‘Let a hundred flowers blossom, let a hundred schools of thought contend’ What does it actually mean??? It means ‘to allow free expression and criticism’. Mao used this expression when, in 1956, he invited Chinese people to assess the performance of the Communist Party, and to offer it advice. An Ancient Chinese Philosopher – the expression comes from a traditional poem.

  3. Mao was confident he had people's support Communist Party successes by 1956 included . . . END TO PROSTITUTION + OPIUM TRADE PEACE CHINA INDEPENDENT OF FOREIGN CONTROL 1950 MARRIAGE LAW + WOMENS’ REFORMS FIRST FIVE YEAR PLAN – A SUCCESS WARLORDS AND BANDITRY SUPPRESSED LAND REFORMS

  4. But problems arose due to rapid development . . . THE 1ST FIVE YEAR PLAN [1953-57] led to . . . Food shortages – much food was sent abroad to buy weapons and machines City populations rose by 40 million – due to peasants moving into cities. Peasants resentful at increasing control of CCP over their lives. Housing Problems Severe overcrowding COLLECTIVISATION 1955 +

  5. Mao recognised there was a need to let people speak out. ‘It is only by using discussion, criticism and reasoning that we can really foster correct ideas, overcome wrong ideas and really settle issues’. But what did he mean by this . . . ???

  6. This cartoon gives a clue . . . What points are being made here by the cartoonist about Mao’s Hundred Flowers campaign?

  7. What Mao really thought . . . ‘Intellectuals are beginning to . . . change their mood from cautious to open . . . One day punishment will come down on their heads . . . We want to let them speak out. You must stiffen your scalps and let them attack! . . . Let all those ox devils and snake demons . . . curse us for a few months. I am casting a long line to bait big fish ’ ‘How can we catch the snakes if we don’t let them out of their lairs? We wanted those sons-of-turtles [bastards] to wriggle out and sing and fart . . . That way we can catch them.’ Jung Chang: ‘Mao–the unknown story’, 2005. P. 435

  8. The main targets of the campaign . . . . . . the Intellectuals. These are the ‘educated’ classes, especially those who have been to university. Who are ‘Intellectuals’? WHY PERSECUTE THEM? They valued freedom of speech. These were the people most likely to speak out against Communist rule, to criticise Mao. PROFESSIONS UNIVERSITY PROFESSORS TEACHERS? JOURNALISTS WRITERS DOCTORS ARTISTS

  9. Scientists escaped persecution Nuclear scientists and technicians escaped the worst persecution of the Hundred Flowers campaign, because they were important to achieving Mao’s ambition to make China into a great military power, to rival America.

  10. 'Democracy Walls' . . . Mao allowed critics to post their views at certain locations on walls or in small meeting rooms [known as ‘seminars’]. In this way their views could be easily controlled and not reach the masses – posters could be removed, meeting rooms only admitted small numbers.

  11. What did people protest about? POLICIES Totalitarian power is peril! In not protecting citizens’ rights, today’s government is worse than the feudal dynasties or Chiang Kai-shek. The Constitution is no more than toilet paper I have indeed heard about peasants . . . Dying from having just grass roots to eat, in areas so rich in produce that they are known as the land of fish and rice. But the newspapers say nothing about any of this . . . Why is it necessary to have “leadership” in the arts? Who led Shakespeare, Tolstoy, Beethoven, Moliere?’

  12. SOME WERE ATTACKS ON LEADERS, MAO HIMSELF ‘In Yenan was Chairman Mao, who had two dishes plus soup for every meal, having a hard time? Were the peasants, who had nothing to eat but bitter vegetables, enjoying the good life? Everyone was told that Chairman Mao was leading a hard and simple life. That son of a bitch! A million shames on him! ... Our pens can never defeat Mao Zedong's Party guards and his imperial army. When he wants to kill you, he doesn't have to do it himself. He can mobilise your wife and children to denounce you and then kill you with their own hands! Is this a rational society? This is class struggle, Mao Zedong style!’ (Benton and Hunter p. 101).

  13. PERSECUTING MAO'S CRITICS A university professor being barracked by his students. Once critics of Mao revealed themselves, Mao retaliated and isolated them. Many were subjected to ‘Struggle’ sessions, where they had to listen to many hours of accusations and, ultimately, apologise for their supposed past ‘faults’ or ‘crimes’.

  14. USE OF TERROR Beatings and 'Struggle Sessions' often took place publicly

  15. The Anti-Rightist Campaign Mao’s attacks on intellectuals broadened into a general campaign of repression, known as the ‘Anti-Rightist’ campaign. Anybody who expressed even the slightest opposition to Mao stood the risk of being reported, victimised and forced to take part in ‘Struggle Sessions’. Raise revolutionary violence, oppose slackers, resolutely eliminate all revolutionary

  16. Punishments . . . Deportees were just dumped in places like the far north of Manchuria, known as ‘the Great Northern Wilderness’, and had to rig up a shelter ‘in a hurry, using wheat stems to make a roof’ in a temperature of -38C. Even with a fire, ‘it was still a dozen or so degrees below zero . . .’ ‘The grass and beaten earth huts we lived in had wind coming in on all sides . . . There were hardly any vegetables or meat . . . We got up . . . Just after 4 at dawn, and did not stop until 7 or 8 in the evening . . . In these 15-16 hours . . . We basically worked non-stop . . . In summer . . . We had to get up at 2.00 am . We had at most three hours’ sleep. " Tie you a rope, " is a Chinese expression commonly used when someone is arrested by the government. Jung Chang: ‘Mao – the unknown story’ 2005. P439

  17. FORCED LABOUR CAMPS - THE LAOGAI A view of Laiyang Heavy Machinery Plant

  18. Camp life was harsh, spartan and brutal.

  19. Artists, who had been sent to a forced labour camp, having to work on propaganda paintings on the side of a building wall.

  20. A botany student from the city is sent to a distant arid farming region to work the land, as punishment for criticising Mao. She was instructed to ‘learn from the peasant’.

  21. HARD LABOUR ‘You’re here to redeem your crime! Don’t dare to make trouble, or look for ways to be lazy!’ Deportees had to work on less than subsistence-level rations. Many died from malnutrition, illness, cold, overwork and in accidents doing unfamiliar jobs like felling trees.

  22. EXECUTIONS Mao talking to colleagues, revealed that one province, Hunan, had ‘denounced 100,000, arrested 10,000, and killed 1000. The other provinces did the same. So our problems were solved.’ [There are 23 provinces in China]. Executions served as a warning to others

  23. Did Mao see himself as an Emperor? “Emperor Qin buried alive only 460 scholars; we have buried 46,000 scholars. But haven’t we killed counter-revolutionary intellectuals?” “Emperor Qin buried alive only 460 scholars; we have buried 46,000 scholars. But haven’t we killed counter-revolutionary intellectuals?”

  24. BUT did events in Eastern Europe play a part? Stalin, the hardline leader of Russia and the Communist world, died in 1953. He was followed by the more moderate Khruschev. Khruschev eased the repression but this led to demands for more freedom and in Hungary led to revolts. If Mao introduced similar moderate reforms what would happen in China? Russia sent in tanks to crush the rebellions What would happen to Mao?

  25. Hungarian Uprising 1956 MAO'S VIEW OF THE 'LESSON FROM EASTERN EUROPE.' ‘The basic problem with some Eastern European countries is that they did not eliminate all those counter-revolutionaries . . . Now they are eating their own bitter fruit . . . Eastern Europe just did not kill on a grand scale. We must kill. And we say it’s good to kill.’

  26. Results of the Hundred Flowers Campaign 1. Mao silenced potential opponents. 2. He instilled fear amongst the educated classes who were now less willing to stand against Mao. 3. Mao prepared the ground for introducing the Great Leap reforms – communes, ‘backyard furnaces’ and an extreme form of communist society 4. China’s intelligentsia [brightest minds – artists, writers, journalists, etc] were decimated which set back China’s cultural development. 5. Many students had their education interrupted due to the death of so many teachers - some 5 million children had their schooling terminated 6. Some 4 million people may have lost their lives in the ‘Anti-Rightist campaigns which started after the Hundred Flowers.

  27. Past GCSE Exam Questions 1998 – Question 9 (4) A. (ii) Why was the “One Hundred Flowers Campaign” introduced? 1999 – Question 10 (3) A. (i) What was meant by ‘Let a hundred flowers bloom’? 2001 – Question 10 A. (iii) Describe the key features of the ‘one hundred flowers campaign’. (5) 2003 – Question 5 A. (iii) Describe the key features of the ‘One Hundred Flowers’ campaign. (5) 2004 – Question 6 A. (ii) Why did Mao end the ‘One Hundred Flowers Campaign’? (5) 2004 – Question 6 B. (i) In what ways did Mao Zedong maintain control over the people of China in the 1950s and early 1960s? (15)

  28. Ma Yinchu Economist President of Beijing University (1882-1982) See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ma_Yinchu Recent Review including his work Reining in world's largest populationBy Chen Zhiyong (China Daily)Updated: 2005-01-06 12:59 http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/english/doc/2005-01/06/content_406543.htm “"We lost one Ma Yinchu but we gained an extra 300 million people," so goes a saying in the late 1970s and early 1980s.

  29. New OFFICIAL web page story http://www.china.org.cn/china/60th_anniversary_people/2009-09/17/content_18546849.htm …famous article "New Population Theory", he expounded on the problem in a systematic way, arguing the population was growing too rapidly. He believed that between 1953 and 1957, the annual growth rate of Chinese population might have exceeded 20‰, a figure drawn from the 1953 national census. …However, on January 4, 1960, he had to resign from the post of Peking University president because of his "New Population Theory". It was not until September 1979 when his case was redressed

  30. Huang Wanli Fund http://huangwanli.com/index.html

  31. Huang Wanli’s 1986 Article Disputing the Three Gorges Dam Proposal Science & Technology Review》 1986-02 Add to FavoriteGet Latest Update ON THE PREREQUISITES OF CONSTRUCTION OF THE SANXIA DAM ON THE YANGTZE RIVER Huang Wanli 【Key Words】: 【DOI】: CNKI:SUN:KJDB.0.1986-02-006 Download(CAJ format) Download(PDF format) CAJViewer7.0 supports all the CNKI file formats; AdobeReader only supports the PDF format.

  32. Hydro power in China in general plus info on Three Gates Gorge Dam http://factsanddetails.com/china.php?itemid=323&catid=13&subcatid=85 Three Gates Gorge Dam – overview and critique http://en.chinaelections.org/newsinfo.asp?newsid=15978

  33. DAMS AND HYDRO POWER IN CHINA • China gets 5 percent of it energy and 20 percent of its electricity from hydro energy. China already has many dams and has plans to build lots more. Share of the worlds dams: 1) China (45 percent); 2) the United States (14 percent); 3) India (9 percent); 4) Japan (6 percent); Other countries (26 percent). • China boasts nearly half of the world’s 50,000 large dams—three times more than the United States —and construction continues.Twenty major dams punctuate the Yellow River and another 18 are scheduled to be built by 2030. Sanmenxia

  34. Note High Silt Load of River Three Gates Gorge Dam Note Re-emergence of agricultural land due to silting in of reservoir.

  35. Photo credits: http://www.chinahighlights.com/photo/sanmenxia/sanmenxia-dam/sanmenxia-shuidianzhan-009-b.htm Thank you for visiting the Three Gates Gorge Dam --- It may not generate much electricity but maybe China can get some tourist dollars from the debacle.

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