By Ms Susan M Pojer and Mr Mark
By: Ms. Susan M. Pojer and Mr. Mark Gonzalez
Chinese Revolution of 1911 (Dr. Sun Yat-sen) • Discontent with Qing (Manchu) Dynasty • Decline of Chinese power • European-educated eliete wanted a modern nation state like Japan • Wanted to kick out Europeans • 1911 -Qing emperor overthrown, Chinese nationalist Sun Yat-sen tried to est. a republican form of govt
Chinese Warlords, 1920 s • China’s regional generals – the warlords still fought for control over China • Sun Yat-sen could not control them • Communist Party emerged in China-inspired by Lenin’s Russian revolution • Yat-sen died in 1925 Yuan Shi-kai
China in 1924
Jiang Jieshu (1887 -1975) takes control in 1925 • Chinese Nationalist. Guomindang Party • Salt merchanton of • Tried to buy out and control the regional warlords • Est. a weak dictatorship (Chiang Kai-shek)
Jiang Jieshi Becomes President of Nationalist China, 1928 • Goal: Built a nationalist army • Did not like the Guomindang’s early Communist alliance • Peasants were suffering under oppression from landlords and warlords • Did little to help the poor-more concerned with building a great army • Turned on the Communistsmassacres in Shanghai (1927) (Chiang Kai-shek)
Mao Zedong As a Young Revolutionary • Student of Chinese communist philosopher Li Dazhao at Beijing University • All of Chinese society=proletariet taken advantage of by a industrialized bourgeois west • Peasants (90% of the population) rather than urban workersdriving force of Communist (Mao Tse-tung) Revolution—(Communist Vanguards)
Mao With His Children, 1930 s • Shared Li’s hostility towards the west and the western-educated Chinese elite and merchants • Hated the Goumindang (Nationalists) • Inspired to spearhead the Long March (1934)-90, 000 joined him to remote northwest to est. communes • Mao-new leader of the Communist party in China
The Long March
Survivors of the March
Victims of the Japanese bombing of Shanghai.
Japanese Soldiers March into Nanking December 9, 1937
The Japanese Invasion, 1937
Remains of Chinese Children Bayoneted by Japanese Soldiers
Beheadings Took Place in Public!
Effects of the Japanese Invasion of China • Chiang had to ally with communists to fight the Japanese threat • Nationalists lost their power base along the coast-forced to relocate the base of power at Chongqing • Nationalist (Guodmindang) power declined due to their failure to protect China from the Japanese imperialism and atrocitties
The Peoples’ Liberation Army, 1949 • Mao drove out the Nationalist forces of Chiang Kai-Shek from China to Taiwan • Declared the founding of the People’s Republic of China under Communist rule • “Two Chinas”: Taiwan and mainland China
The Communist Victory
Taiwan: The Republic of China founded by Chiang Kai-shek
Jiang Jieshu (1887 -1975) (Chiang Kai-shek)
The People’s Republic of China (Communist)
Reasons for the Communists’ Success ► Mao won support of peasants – land ► Mao won support of women ► Mao’s army used guerilla war tactics ► Many saw the Nationalist government as corrupt ► Many felt that the Nationalists allowed foreigners to dominate China.
Great Leap Forward, 1958 ► 5 year plan to increase agriculture and industry (Soviet-style) ►Utopian-effort to equalize Chinese society ► Communes (Land Reform)-redistributed property of the rich to the poor e Groups of people who live and work together e Property held in common e Had production quotas ► Failed due to poor quality of products, poor weather hurt agriculture (fears of the loss of the mandate of heaven)
Communist China Under Mao Industrialized China Increased literacy Class privileges ended Rural Chinese received health care ► One-party dictatorship ► Denied people basic rights and freedoms --> Inner Mongolia, Tibet ► ►
Mao, Panchen Lama, Dalai Lama in Beijing, 1954 ► Tibet --> an autonomous area. ►Religious freedom ended in China ► Dalai Lama fled in the late 1950 s to India.
A Campaign Against the “FOUR OLDS” ► Old Thoughts ► Old Culture ► Old Customs ► Old Habits To Rebel Is Good!
Communist China Under Mao ► Designed to renew revolutionary spirit and establish a more equitable society ► Mao wanted to put “intellectuals” in their place ► Schools shut down – students revolted ► Red Guards – students who attacked professors, government officials, factory managers and destroyed universities
A Red Guard
Red Guards March to Canton
With regard to the great teacher Chairman Mao, cherish the word 'Loyalty'. With regard to the great Mao Zedong Thought, vigorously stress the word 'Usefullness'. (1968) Cult of Personality
The reddest, red sun in our heart, Chairman Mao, and us together Zhejiang Workers, Farmers and Soldiers Art Academy collective, 1968 Mao’s Little Red Book
Go among the workers, peasants and soldiers, and into the thick of struggle! 1967 -1972
Propaganda Poster
“Ping-Pong Diplomacy”: U. S. Players at Great Wall, 1971 • Goal: wanted more limited contact with other countries
Mao Meets President Nixon, 1972
Power Struggle Modernists 1976 Communist Traditionalists Zhou Enlai “The Gang of Four”: Jiang Qin, Chen Boda, Wang Hongwen, Yao Wenyuan
Deng Xiaoping (1905 -1997) • A more moderate communist • Emerged as the new leader of China after Mao’s death • His vision drastically altered China’s direction • “Four Modernizations” • Restore trade w/ other nations (including the US) • Higher education standards • Restore bureaucracy of old China and infuse some capitalism
De-Maoization “The 4 Modernizations” Progress in: ► Agriculture ► Industry ► Science ► Defense Class struggle was no longer the central focus!
Tiananmen Square, 1989 More democracy!
Tiananmen Square, 1989 Democracy—Our Common Ideal!
Tiananmen Square, 1989 The Government Clamps Down
Tiananmen Square, 1989 One Lone Man’s Protest
Tiananmen Square, 1989 The Massacre: The People’s Army Moves In
Tiananmen Square, 1989 The Army Looks for Dissidents
Tiananmen Square, 1989 Student Leaders Are Arrested
Tiananmen Square, 1989 Chinese Students Mourn the Dead
Tiananmen Square, 1989 The Reestablishment of Order
Demography ► may be no surer predictor of destiny than trade data. But of the two momentous changes championed by Deng Xiaoping a quarter-century ago, coercive population controls and experiments with market economics (capitalism), the jury is still out on which will do more to shape China's long-term potential.
Demography
Demography ►There are too many retirees in China, and not enough young people to replace them.
Demography ► "The evidence is overwhelming that a large population of unmarried adult males is a risk factor for both crime and war, " Ms. den Boer said in an interview. "The fact that China is an authoritarian country is another risk factor. "
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