Social history of Maoist China conflict and change, 1949-1976
Material type: TextSeries: New approaches to Asian historyPublication details: Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2019Description: xv,331p 25 cmISBN:- 9781107565500
- 306.0951 23 WE-S
- HN733.5 .W46 2017
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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OPJGU Sonepat- Campus Main Library | General Books | 306.0951 WE-S (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 143191 |
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306.0951 LI-I In one`s own shadow an ethnographic account of the condition of post-reform rural China | 306.0951 LI-R Ritual music and ethos of culture in ancient China | 306.0951 PO- Popular China unofficial culture in a globalizing society | 306.0951 WE-S Social history of Maoist China conflict and change, 1949-1976 | 306.09510904 EV- Everyday modernity in China | 306.0951132 FR-P Power of place contentious politics in twentieth-century Shanghai and Bombay | 306.095114 KI-P Producing Guanxi sentiment, self, and subculture in a North China village |
"When the Chinese communists came into power in 1949, they promised to "turn society upside down". Efforts to build a communist society created hopes and dreams, coupled with fear and disillusionment. The Chinese people made great efforts towards modernization and social change in this period of transition, but they also experienced traumatic setbacks. Covering the period 1949 to 1976 and then tracing the legacy of the Mao era through the 1980s, Felix Wemheuer focuses on questions of class, gender, ethnicity and the urban-rural divide in this new social history of Maoist China. He analyzes the experiences of a range of social groups under Communist rule - workers, peasants, local cadres, intellectuals, "ethnic minorities", the old elites, men and women. To understand this tumultuous period, he argues, we must recognize the many complex challenges facing the People's Republic. But we must not lose sight of the human suffering and political terror that, for many now ageing quietly across China, remain the period's abiding memory."--Provided by publisher.
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