Mao's Last Revolution
With his three-volume The Origins of the Cultural Revolution, MacFarquhar established himself as the leading authority on the Cultural Revolution. Now, in collaboration with Schoenhals, he has produced a massive single-volume account of the event and of Mao Zedong's revolutionary ways. Although the authors indicate that they have in mind an audience that includes new generations of students of China, it would be wrong to think of this work as a general survey of the subject, for it is an outstanding and creative scholarly work. They have skillfully brought into the study much new information from several newly opened archives and the memoirs of participating Chinese officials. Rather than advancing any provocative new theory, the book carefully reconstructs the history of elite politics under Mao, with a focus on the changing alignments of friends, enemies, and "enemies of the people." It also addresses the unique role of students and Red Guards. (In a one-month period in 1966, Red Guards looted 33,695 homes in Beijing and 84,222 in Shanghai.) MacFarquhar and Schoenhals make clear that although innumerable people did awful things, the blame for the chaos falls squarely on Mao and his obsession with revolution.
Related
For some months, 1966 promised to be a year of significant albeit gradual change in American policy toward Communist China. In a strange and paradoxical fashion, the emotional issues of the Viet Nam War opened the way for the most sober, responsible and even-handed public discussion of China since the Communists came to power. At Congressional hearings and in the mass media, scholars and leaders of opinion have dispassionately calculated the possibilities for change, and Administration leaders have in their customarily guarded language intimated that change was not impossible. Most significant of all, the American public demonstrated a gratifying degree of maturity by forgetting the old passions and asking for only facts and analyses about the new China. Our national mood was increasingly one of believing that with prudence and wisdom it would be possible to work toward gradually incorporating China into responsible world relationships.
Are The Tiananmen Papers authentic? What do they tell us? The truth could overturn an official history that has stymied political reform in China for a decade.
Christopher Patten's new book goes beyond Hong Kong to offer a sensible middle ground in the debate over the link between culture and Asia's rise -- and fall.

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