"Cultural Revolution" Essays and Research Papers

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    During the cultural revolution of the 1960s and 70s‚ china underwent many drastic changes. The leader of the chinese communist party was Mao Zedong‚ a powerful man who believed that the peasant class represented the best of chinese society. The text “china’s cultural revolution is better.” This is about how people in the cultural revolution treated theirself. Centuries of resentment often led to violence‚ and peasants sometimes attacked people from higher classes. I chose this reason because it

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    The Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution or the Cultural Revolution (1966 -1976) was one of the most dramatic and bleakest periods in the history of the People’s Republic of China. The roots of the Cultural Revolution date back to the late 1950s to the early 1960s when the Great Leap Forward ended in catastrophe. The leader‚ Mao Zedong lost a lot of his influence among his revolutionary comrades‚ supporters and eventually‚ he was removed from actual powers by the members of the party. During his

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    Plan of investigation Within this investigation‚ I intend to investigate the role played by the Chinese youth during the Cultural Revolution in 1966-1969. I plan to analyze the importance and contributions committed by the youth of the time. In order to do this I will gather information‚ which I then will review‚ compare and evaluate from a critical perspective. This is in order to finally be able to come to a conclusion to the question above. By taking into account the sources’ origins‚ purposes

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    countries. There is a country which looks plentiful‚ no worries and everyone is happy. However‚ the reality is quite opposite‚ there is no fundamentals human right and everything are under government control which is China. During the Cultural Revolution‚ Ai WeiWei’s childhood was like a desert. Many people were killed or died due to starvation. And they were suffered stomach without medicine. His whole family and many citizens were living

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    Did anyone benefit from the Cultural Revolution? Few people would deny that the Cultural Revolution is one of the most significant events in China’s history‚ with its extraordinary effects on many groups of the population. The main aim of the revolution was simple: having risen to power‚ the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) wanted to reform the Chinese population so that they followed the communist ideology – the favour of absolute social equality. While the initial impression of this aim seems positive

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    Zedong believed that his socialist campaign was being threatened by Liu Shaoqi and his comrades who‚ in Mao’s eyes‚ were traitors to the revolution because they shied away from a genuine mass movement. These veteran revolutionaries who had helped Mao create the People’s Republic were now seemingly less committed to Mao’s vision. In Mao’s eyes the Chinese Revolution was losing ground because of party conservatism and large bureaucracy. Mao insisted that many party bureaucrats “were taking the capitalist

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    The document ‘Remembering China’s Cultural Revolution’ creates a melancholic feeling. An anonymous writer who was a victim of the brutality of Cultural Revolution in China writes it. The document‚ written in 1966‚ gives an account of events that led the writer to live an awful life. He describes his life as miserable; the future holds no good to him‚ as a direct victim of Mao Zedong paradigm‚ he endures a lot of suffering‚ he swears to avenge his suffering. The author‚ a victim of human rights violence

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    The great Proletarian cultural revolution * All over China was the campaign to destroy the old and build the new * Abolishing the four olds * The people crowding Beijing in 1966 carried the little red book and the Mao badge * forcefully taken away anything old or has traditional values. * The children were taken into actions as well * Giving social advantages to the Red guards‚ thousand took advantage * The youth were educated of the revolutionary stories * Women had

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    the political consequences was that Mao wanted to reassert himself and regain power in China after he was demoted because of the failure of the Great Leap Forward. Mao had the gained the support of Lin Biao and the PLA therefore launched the Cultural Revolution. Mao wanted to get rid of anti communist ideas and opposition that would pose a threat to his leadership and foreign ideas that would influence the people of China. As a long-term consequence of getting rid of anti communist ideas‚ Mao closed

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    which launched the initial idea for the Cultural Revolution. Was one man’s pride worth the countless deaths that marked the Cultural Revolution? Similarly‚ Stalin’s choke on the Soviet Union was irreversibly tied to the several purges that occurred during his rule. However‚ while the Great Terror could be over-simplified into purism that far exceeded passion‚ there is an aspect to the Cultural Revolution that feels personal. The author argues the Revolution must have been in response‚ and an attempt

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