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Mao, and the Communist Revolution

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Title: Mao, and the Communist Revolution


1
Mao, and the Communist Revolution
1948 - 1965
  • Shane Arguello, Ana Ariza

2
Chinese Civil War
  • After the Japanese surrender in World War II,
    territory in China was open for grabs.
  • The Chinese Nationalists (the KMT, Kuomintang
    party) and Communists (the CCP, Chinese Communist
    Party) took advantage, and made huge grasps for
    land.
  • But the two main factions had distinctly opposing
    views, which broke out into war in 1947 when
    Chiang, leader of the KMT, attacked the
    Communists openly.
  • American tried to intervene, but it did not aid
    the matter, nor did it make it worse.
  • Halfway through the war, Chiang began to spread
    out its troops too much, making them susceptible
    to attack.
  • Mao Zedong, leader of the communist party, saw
    the weakness, and with conjunction with the Red
    Army, completely racked the Kuomintang army.
  • The war ended in 1949. Communism won.
  • Mao formed the Peoples Republic of China on
    October 1st, 1949.
  • The U.S., though supplying the cause with 2
    billion in aid, lost their trust for China when
    they and the Soviet Union signed a stalemate
    treaty in 1950. The United States paranoia of
    Communism continued into China, who they thought
    that with the Soviet Union, would work to spread
    it.

3
Mao Zedong
  • He was the leader of the CCP, or the Chinese
    Communist Party
  • He was born to a peasant farmer family, and
    adopted the Marxist theory of government while
    working as a library assistant in Peking
    University.
  • His ideology was heavily adapted from that of
    Vladimir Lenin, the leader of the Bolsheviks in
    the Communist Russian Revolution.
  • With a win over the Nationalist Kuomintang, he
    formed the Peoples Republic of China in 1947.
  • The peasants of China were generally happy with
    Mao Zedong. He made leaps to improve their
    education, literacy, and their supplies of food
    during the Civil War. His support of the peasants
    helped him immensely during the war.
  • Also, the introduction of the Little Leap
    Forward, which was technically a redesigning of
    the agriculture system, angered the peasants.
    They were forced to comply with the new
    collective farming system.
  • His support of the peasants wavered during the
    Great Leap Forward. The peasants had nothing to
    gain by working, and their morale to do it
    lowered.

4
The Great Leap Forward
  • The movement to expand the economy was a brutal
    one for the people.
  • The second movement began in 1958 with the Great
    Leap Forward, a program designed to increase
    their agriculture production, increase nearly
    five-fold their production of steel, and the
    efficiency and use of coal and electricity for
    energy.
  • All the people of the nation were drafted in.
    They were given a steel furnace to produce their
    own steel in their backyards, as well as a little
    farm to yield more crops.
  • Communities built collective farms and factories
    to produce even more than what they did in their
    backyards.
  • For the peoples efforts, they were given no
    portion of the profits of the industry and
    agriculture.
  • It becomes obvious that the use of only steel
    furnaces would never produce the steel with as a
    high a merit as one that would come from a true
    steel mill.
  • Agriculture results weren't that great either. In
    fact, the peasants often lied about the amount
    they harvested, so to not disappoint their
    superiors.
  • It ended in failure. A prolonged flood of three
    years, inadequate harvests, and the withdrawal of
    Soviet Technical Experts led to its end. A famine
    struck hard during the Great Leap Forward,
    causing the government to call off the program in
    1961.
  • The failure caused Mao to resign from his
    position of chairman in the CCP.

5
Cultural Revolution
  • The Great Leap Forward was called off, and now
    new economic policies took its place, some of
    which had a high Soviet influence.
  • Mao disliked the changes, and encouraged
    revolution to the young people of China.
  • The people rallied together a militia, called the
    Red Guard. Its members were primarily teenager
    students.
  • They led a heated revolt throughout China,
    severing the intellectuals who they considered
    dangerous to the Maoist ways.
  • Colleges were shut down, schools were shut down,
    books were burned, buildings were destroyed,
    people were beat, and a select few of Maos
    enemies were murdered. To sum it in one word, it
    was chaos.
  • A group called the Gang of Four became the center
    of the revolution, pursuing the radical goals of
    the Red Guard. In 1976, they went imprisoned,
    receiving either the deaths sentence or twenty
    years prison time.
  • Though it was Mao who encouraged the revolution,
    he was also the one to stop it. The army was put
    into motion, and quelled all the rebellions.
    This, plus the Gang of Four imprisonment, ended
    the Cultural Revolution.
  • Like the Great Leap Forward, this critical
    movement also incited by Mao Zedong ended in
    failure.

6
So basically.
  • The CCP (Chinese Communist Party), under Mao,
    defeated the Nationalists (the Kuomintang), and
    established the Peoples Republic of China.
  • Mao Zedong became the chairman of the CCP.
    Peasants at first liked him, but then did not
    because of his reforms.
  • Mao employed the second Five Year Plan in the
    form of the Great Leap Forward, and plan to
    improve agriculture and industry. Ended in
    failure.
  • In the Cultural Revolution, the Red Guard went up
    against the intellectuals of China, and those
    considered to be Maos enemies. They were under
    the driving influence of the Gang of Four, who
    are now blamed for the scale the conflict that
    the revolution had risen to. It was pure chaos.
    Mao and Chinas army worked together to stop the
    riots.

7
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