"Communist Party of China" Essays and Research Papers

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    Indochinese Communist Party Heads the Independence Movement in 1940’s Communism in Vietnam in the 1940’s was coming to the forefront. Not only that‚ the Indochinese Communist Party (ICP) was making headway‚ as one of the largest parties in Vietnam‚ on Vietnams fight for independence. There are many reasons why the ICP were at the forefront; among those is France’s Downfall in 1939 followed by the revitalization of the ICP‚ the debate over “person-hood‚” Famine during the late part of WWII which

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    Marxism and Mao

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    peasant movement in Hunan province reinforced Mao’s convictions about the peasantry as a revolutionary force. In china‚ man and woman are usually subjected to the domination of the three systems of authority: the state systems‚ the clan system‚ the supernatural system‚ and women are dominated by man. Hundreds of millions peasants have been oppressed for thousands years. Because of the china is semi-colonial and semi-feudal country‚ with this very special situation the peasants overthrow the local tyrants

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    China’s Communist leader Mao Zedong launched what became known as the Cultural Revolution in order to reassert his authority over the Chinese government. Believing that current Communist leaders were taking the party‚ and China itself‚ in the wrong direction‚ Mao called on the nation’s youth to purge the “impure” elements of Chinese society and revive the revolutionary spirit that had led to victory in the civil war 20 decades earlier and the formation of the People’s Republic of China. Mao Zedong (December

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    Ap World Dbq

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    1900-1950 the countries of India and China where experiencing independent and nationalist movements. These movements differed in the ways they achieved their goals. While China encompassed two major political powers‚ India had one. Both of these movements had a leading political figurehead. India met their independence through nonviolence‚ while China portrayed internal conflict. On the other hand‚ India encompassed only one major political party while China had two. Both movements raised political

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    Mao's Cultural Revolution

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    collapse of China ’s Great Leap Forward‚ initiated by the Communist Party‚ Mao Zedong had lost a lot of momentum he had gained in the pursuit of his ideal nation. In an attempt to take back the control he once had in reforming China ’s political and economic policy‚ Mao launched the Cultural Revolution‚ a movement that intended to disintegrate Chinese culture‚ tradition‚ and social aspects of life from the superpower Mao sought to create‚ so that it may translate to a leveled Communist environment

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    imagination. The Chinese Communist Party assigned Gu Qing to find folk songs to raise the morale of his fellow comrades. However‚ from a 21st century perspective‚ it is evident that communism bought about problems in China and the director‚ Chen Kaige wanted to subtly address these issues using the lyrics sung by the character‚ Cuiqiao. Cuiqiao is the perfect embodiment of how the Communist Party wanted to introduce communism – alluring‚ melodic‚ and welcoming. However‚ China suffered from internal

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    eventually‚ Maoism. China has made an extraordinary journey along the road back to greatness. Hundreds of millions have lifted themselves out of poverty‚ hundreds of millions more have joined the new middle class. It is on the verge of reclaiming what it sees as its rightful position in the world. China’s global influence is expanding and within a decade its economy is expected to overtake America’s. In his first weeks in power‚ the new head of the ruling Communist Party‚ Xi Jinping‚ has evoked

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    Swag

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    1904: Deng Xiaoping is born in Sichuan Province‚ China. He is the first-born son of a Hakka landowner. 1920: Deng graduates from Chongqing Preparatory School and he travels with about 80 of his fellow graduates to France to study. He is about 16 years old. Deng has to work in a factory to support himself. He becomes a machinist. He joins a socialist youth organization. 1924: He returns to China and joins the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). He becomes an instructor at the Military and Political

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    Assess Mao's Rise to Power

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    all these characteristics although‚ as a good communist‚ he set no store by superstition. Relatively well off by local standards. As a farmer’s son‚ Mao grew up with an immediate‚ innate appreciation of a truth that better-off communist scholars would have to learn: land is a means of production. He was expected to lend a hand as soon as he was able. His leadership of the communist revolution and the establishment of the people’s republic of China in 1949 earned him the title of Chairman Mao and

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    didn’t he reform and adapt to the realistic needs of the Chinese people? Even if Mao didn’t live to see his country adapt to a more modern time‚ his successors did. Was Mao’s “cult of personality”- something he assured Stalin would never develop in China- too large for his own good‚ causing delusions in his governing? Perhaps so‚ since he often blamed “deliberate sabotage” by “class enemies” and incorrect “distortion of class policies.” One could argue that‚ while Mao was a megalomaniac whose main

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