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Life in Mao’s China Mr. Parker IBH2
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Thesis Mao’s period of rule (1949-1976) had a profound on the impact on the people of China: Religion Status of Women Chinese Culture Education and Health Mao’s Prison Camps – the Laogai
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Religion Marx – “Religion is the opiate of the people.” Chinese communism supported this interpretation as they identified religion as a means of social control. CCP undertook a campaign against organised religion. Targeted both foreign religions (Christianity and Islam) and traditional Chinese religions – Buddhism, Confucianism and Ancestor Worship. Objective: Loyalty to Mao and the party would replace religion.
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Attacks on Religion All aspects of formal religion were targeted, shut down or confiscated. Christian ministers and missionaries were arrested or deported. Creation of “Patriotic Churches” – approved by the Party and in conflict with the Vatican. Propaganda and re-education. Attacks increased and became more violent during the Cultural revolution Religion was one of the “Four Olds”
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Outcomes: Religion and culture are hard to suppress – forced underground. Maoism made in-roads, but traditional values remained strong in many areas. Separatism and nationalism in Tibet and Xinjiang.
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Status of Women Under traditional Confucian society, China was patriarchal and women were meant to be subordinate. With regards to women, Mao was heavily influenced by his early life – arranged marriage and Changsha incident. Publicly supporter of women’s rights, but privately a womaniser. Mao and the CCP were accused of hypocrisy (Ding Ling)
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Marriage Reform End to concubinage End to arranged marriages Dowries and bride prices out-lawed Divorce was permitted – especially in case of arranged marriages All marriages needed to be officially recorded.
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Economic and Political Changes Women were granted property rights – buy and sell land Granted Equality under the law Equality in terms of employment
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Disadvantages Equality also meant being treated as equal to men – especially in labour force Collectivization meant private property became meaningless Ingrained social attitudes meant that women were still seen as inferior The Great Famine saw women and female children being traded and sold – girls left to die Cultural Revolution – greater attacks on family and family structure further undermined the role and status of women Ultimately despite legal protections the attacks on social and family structures left women, especially peasant women socially disconnected.
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Reshaping of Chinese Culture Mao believed that culture was a reflection of society. China had been a feudal society, but was to become a proletarian society – this meant the eradication of bourgeois and feudal culture. To achieve this there needed to be a cultural revolution and violence was perfectly acceptable. Mao appointed his wife, Jiang Qing as chief architect of the Cultural Revolution. A job she embraced with fanatical zeal. Political Correctness and cultural barbarism Moral cowardice of the intelligentsia
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Education and Health Mao and the CCP identified education and health as major areas for reform and progress. Literacy – 20% in 1940 to 70% in 1970 Standardization of mandarin – creation of pinyin Cultural Revolution – ultimately undid many of the gains – attacked the basic value of education – undermined the gains made between 1949 and 1966
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Health Education to eliminate causes of endemic diseases Training of doctors and nurses for rural and remote areas Barefoot Doctors Again Cultural Revolution saw the reversal of many of the gains.
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Mao’s Prison Camps Laogai Based on Soviet gulags Places of re-education – but basically designed to break the spirit 10 000 camps – inhospitable areas Source of slave labour A source of terror 25 million died in the camps
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Overall Impact Despite lofty ideals and a genuine desire to improve the life of the average Chinese citizen, China under Mao was a place of chaos and turmoil There were gains, but many were wiped out by the Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution
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Review Explain why Mao introduced marriage reform laws in the 1950’s. The position of women deteriorated in Mao’s China. Agree or Disagree. How far did the status of women improve in China between 1949 and 1965.
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