Mao Zedong Essay

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    Hung Liu was born in 1948 in Changchun, China, however, she grew up in Beijing. There, she experienced the Cultural Revolution under the power of Mao Tse-tung. Around the age of 20, Hung Liu went to live in the countryside where she had to work with peasants in the fields. When schools finally reopened, she started thriving chose to study. Later she became a teacher at an elite Beijing school. She also had a television show revolving how to draw and paint. Then in 1984, Hung Liu was off to San…

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    Chairman Mao is the egregious dictator responsible for the destruction during the Cultural Revolution, achieved due to his manipulative nature. For example, near Ji-Li’s house stands a propaganda wall filled with quotes and pictures of Mao, one of which Ji-Li describes as, “… a beautiful copy of the popular painting Mao Ze-Dong on His Way to Anyuan… I could not look at the painting without feeling inspired. I was ready to follow him anywhere (101)”. This wall is an example of how Mao uses…

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    The Great Leap Forward began in 1958. It was Mao Zedong’s plan to catch China up with the Western world’s economy. It was supposed to turn China into an industrial superpower, but it failed terribly. By examining the casualty count, effects on China, and the reasons people died, it is clear that Mao’s Great Leap Forward was one of the worst genocides in history. Even though Mao didn’t directly want to kill anyone, he is still responsible for the deaths that his poor policy led to. Since…

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    Tiananmen Square Protest

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    Tiananmen Square Protest 1989 People protest for a reason, there is a problem with something and they want a change, they want to be heard. They can last for a long time, days, months and years until they get what they want. During protest things can get out of hand and people become violent and that’s where everything gets too far. Today protesting isn’t as bad as it was before, we try to result to agreements and there aren’t as many deaths as there were as before. In 1989 Tiananmen Square was…

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    The Communist Party of China was formed in 1921. It was under Mao Zedong's control beginning in 1927. Mao led a revolution and followed the example of the Soviet Union through the way they led and developed their country by industry and support from the Peasants although it caused him to fail in the end. Mao split from what was known as Marxism and developed Maoism, the Chinese way of communism. Mao was upset with the Soviet Union leader Khrushchev because he believed in peaceful living…

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    In all cases, the possession of power led to corruption, as Mao became overbearing in the lives of the Chinese, Four Eyes selfishly hoarded the books, and, most importantly, the narrator treated the headmaster spitefully when given the opportunity to inflict excessive pain. However, the actions of the narrator…

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    The 40's Xu Fugui

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    To live is a fictional period drama, made in the 90's, focusing on the decades that led up to the era of Mao's, as well as during and after this period. To live follows the lives of one man and his family. In the 40's Xu Fugui is a rich man's son and an avid gambler who eventually loses his father's mansion. His wife, Jiazhen, first threatens to force him to stop because she has become pregnant with their second child, then leaves in order to teach him a lesson. She wants to make sure that if…

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    Mao Tse Tung was the leader of the Communist and started terrorizing the people of China once he came into power. His reign lead to an intellectual life in China that was mostly submissive to the Communist Party. Mao wanted to rewrite history to reflect his ideals for the world, so he had all the books that were from before his will destroyed or hidden. The…

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    Cultural Revolution Dbq

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    As Mao and his administration came through into politics and the public eye, Mao’s vision of a New China began. In this, it was officially named the Cultural Revolution—due to its goal to restore the “vitality” of communism in China. The reality of said revolution differed greatly from China’s new government’s claims about it, through the morality blindness that society faced throughout the 60s. China’s new communist-style government has marketed and made Mao Tse-tung one of China’s biggest…

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    economically, socially, and politically. It had positive impacts that helped the country and it had negative aspects that affected the Chinese. Either way, Mao Tse-Tung impacted the Chinese in different ways. Mao forced a new society gradually as time progressed. He started off by having teenagers and people in their early 20’s join the Red Guard. Mao believed they were perfect for it since teenagers are fearless, eager, and were easy to manipulate (Document 3). He also started enforcing…

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