The political development of the PRC 1952-62 Flashcards

1
Q

What were the 3 main areas of economic debate within the CCP in 1952?

A

1) The amount of tax that wealthier peasants and private capitalists should pay.
2) How resources should be allocated within the economic plan.
3) The pace that economic change should occur.

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2
Q

What did the PRC announce in 1953 in regards to its development?

A

That the PRC was entering a phase of industrialisation and agricultural development in order to become a
socialist society.

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3
Q

What was the new ‘general line’?

A

The PRC would develop industrially and agriculturally across 15 years, whilst moving further towards
collective land and industry ownership.

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4
Q

How would the ‘general line’ be achieved (2)?

A

1) Through central state planning, following the example of the USSR by using Five Year Plans.
2) The United Front with the national bourgeoise would not be abandoned.

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5
Q

Who was Liu Shaoqi (2)?

A

1) He became Vice-Chairman of the CCP in 1956, and Chairman of the PRC in 1959.
2) After the GLF he became more pragmatic in terms of economic planning, and was purged during the
Cultural Revolution. He died in 1969 in prison from pneumonia.

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6
Q

Who was Rao Shushi?

A

The governor of the East China region, becoming minister of the Party’s organisation department in 1953.

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7
Q

What positions did Gao Gang hold in the CCP by 1952 (2)?

A

1) The leading CCP official in Manchuria in 1949, holding all senior posts in the region ( in the CCP, the
PLA and the State Bureaucracy).
2) He became head of the Central Planning Commission in charge of directing the First Five Year Plan.

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8
Q

How did Gao Gang try to gain further power?

A

In the debate over the pace of economic change, Gao sided with Mao, criticising Zhou Enlai and Liu Shaoqi
for their cautious approach. With the support of Rao Shushi and the belief of having Mao’s support, Gao
attempted to usurp the position of Zhou Enlai.

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9
Q

How did Mao purge Gao Gang and Rao Shushi?

A

Alerted to Gao’s intrigues by Deng Xiaoping, Mao used the December 1953 Politburo meeting to accuse Gao
and Rao of ‘underground activities’ and attempting to build ‘independent kingdoms’.

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10
Q

What were the 4 main consequences of the purge of Gao Gang and Rao Shushi?

A

1) Gao committed suicide in 1954, rather than face further humiliation and disgrace.
2) Rao was arrested and died in prison around 20 years later.
3) CCP officials realised there were limits to the scope of debate.
4) Mao’s position was strengthened, with leading CCP officials realising that they were expendable.

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11
Q

When was the purge of Gao Gang and Rao Shushi?

A

1953.

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12
Q

Why were the CCP suspicious of intellectuals (2)?

A

1) Higher education prior to 1949 was expensive, so most intellectuals were from wealthier landlord or
bourgeoise families.
2) Most Chinese with university degrees had been educated either in foreign universities or in Chinese
universities run by Western foundations.

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13
Q

Why did the CCP need intellectuals?

A

If China were to achieve the economic growth that they were planning, the CCP would need intellectuals to
fill the professional roles (such as scientists, engineers, statisticians, geologists, etc.) essential to a planned,
industrial economies.

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14
Q

Why did intellectuals struggle to adapt to the CCP regime?

A

Most intellectuals had been educated in academic freedom, so they struggled to adapt to the PRC where such
values were regarded as counter-revolutionary thought.

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15
Q

Who was Hu Feng?

A

A Chinese literary critic, who followed a Marxist line, but refused to follow the CCP line in regards to
literature. He was regarded as a dangerous free-thinker.

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16
Q

What was the anti-Hu Feng campaign (2)?

A

1) In 1955, Hu Feng wrote that the CCP control over culture had stifled creativity and art. He was charged
with being a GMD agent, expelled from the writers union, and imprisoned until 1979.
2) The Party then conducted a campaign to irradicate ‘Hu Feng elements’ from intellectual life.

17
Q

When was the anti-Hu Feng campaign?

A

1955.

18
Q

What were the consequences of the anti-Hu Feng campaign (3)?

A

1) By 1956, intellectuals learned that openly expressing their views was too dangerous.
2) Around 2,000 Hu Feng supporters were criticised by the media.
3) Around 100 Hu Feng supporters were arrested or forced to make self-criticisms.

19
Q

What was the Hundred Flowers campaign?

A

Mao openly encouraged intellectuals to voice their criticisms of CCP leadership and policies.

20
Q

What was the slogan for the Hundred Flowers campaign?

A

‘Let a hundred flowers blossom, let a hundred schools of thought contend’.

21
Q

Who was Chen Yun?

A

A member of the Politburo since 1934, with a specialist knowledge in economics.

22
Q

What were the 3 influences on Mao for launching the Hundred Flowers campaign?

A

1) The targets of the First Five Year Plan were achieved a year early, however there was growing peasant
resistance and problems in collectivising agriculture. Mao wanted to speed up economic change, but saw
opposition in the Party. Mao looked to support from outside the party.
2) Mao feared the growing bureaucracy within the CCP, and believed that the Party was becoming alienated
from the people. He thought criticism would ‘rectify’ this.
3) Khrushchev’s speech in 1956 shook the communist world and had significant impact on CCP politics.

23
Q

What were the main consequences of Khrushchev’s speech in 1956 to Mao’s leadership within the CCP (5)?

A

1) Although the speech criticised Stalin, it also indirectly criticised Mao as he followed the Stalin-style of
leadership.
2) Leading officials (e.g. Enlai, Shaoqi and Xiaoping) spoke out in favour of collective leadership.
3) In September 1956 at the CCP Congress, the Party Constitution was changed, removing the reference to
Mao Zedong Thought.
4) Mao withdrew from public life for 3 months.
5) There was growing resistance from students, peasants and workers to CCP policies.

24
Q

How did Mao respond to the growing threat to his power in the mid 1950s (4)?

A

1) Mao moved away from from the Soviet model of economic planning.
2) Mao argued that the growing unrest was because the Party had become divorced from the people.
3) Mao stated China had to develop their own style of socialism.
4) Mao proposed the Hundred Flowers campaign to rectify the Party.

25
Q

How did Mao attempt to gain support for the Hundred Flowers campaign in Spring 1957?

A

Mao was unable to get the campaign started in 1956, as the Politburo feared it would undermine the regime
of the CCP. In February 1957, Mao called again for the Hundred Flowers campaign in a speech, and in
Spring 1957, he took a 3 week train journey, eventually gaining support for the campaign, which was
sanctioned in April 1957.

26
Q

When was the Hundred Flowers campaign officially launched?

A

May 1957.

27
Q

What was the public response to the Hundred Flowers campaign (2)?

A

1) It unleashed a wave of criticism against the CCP regime. Intellectuals attacked the regime through posters,
the press, magazines and rallies, criticising how the CCP treated the people, becoming alienated from the
people, their slavish following of the Soviet development model and their human rights abuse.
2) There were reports of student riots and attacks on CCP cadres.

28
Q

What was the anti-Rightist campaign (3)?

A

1) By July 1957, Mao launched an attack on intellectuals after he grew concerned about the constant criticism
received during the Hundred Flowers campaign.
2) Mao deemed those who criticised him and the Party ‘rightists’. As many as 500,000 intellectuals were
branded ‘rightists’, and were subject to ‘re-education’ in the countryside, labour camps, or execution.
3) Many committed suicide due to the mental pressure.

29
Q

What caused the anti-Rightist campaign?

A

By early June, Mao was ready to abandon the Hundred Flowers Campaign, accusing Party ‘revisionists’ of
working with anti-Party ‘rightists’ to undermine the regime. Mao launched the anti-Rightist campaign, setting
a quota for ‘rightists’ exposed, who would be subject to labour camps, re-education in the countryside, or
public execution (around 500,000 intellectuals were branded rightists). Many committed suicide due to
severe mental pressure.

30
Q

When was the anti-Rightist campaign launched?

A

July 1957.

31
Q

How were ‘rightists’ identified (3)?

A

1) Mao set a quota for each area for rightists identified and punished.
2) The criteria for identifying rightists was deliberately vague. As long as the quota was filled, officials could
purge anyone they wished.
3) E.g. a 17 year old was sent to a labour camp for praising American shoe polish.

32
Q

How did the anti-Rightist campaign consolidate Mao’s power (3)?

A

1) Mao was able to remove political opponents and unsettle the Party, reinforcing his demands for
unquestioning obedience.
2) It silenced criticism towards the CCP for a generation.
3) Mao ensured that his approach to economic development would be followed in the coming years.

33
Q

When did Mao step down as Chairman of the PRC?

A

April 1959.

34
Q

Who replaced Mao as Chairman of the PRC?

A

Liu Shaoqi.

35
Q

How significant was Mao’s stepping down as Chairman of the PRC in 1959?

A

The change was merely symbolic, as Mao was still the Chairman of the CCP, giving him control over the
ideological direction of the PRC.