Class Struggle and The Cultural Revolution
Class Struggle and The Cultural Revolution
Class Struggle and The Cultural Revolution
During the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution (GPCR) the use of language
referring both to class structure, and class struggle was frequent and
provocative. This language pervaded the political discourse not only of political
elites, but of the various mass-participation political groups that arose during the
period. However, whether the use of such rhetoric actually reflected the nature
of the political struggle that occurred during this period is debatable.
This essay shall attempt to answer the following questions: (1) in regards to both
official class designation and economic inequality, was the GPCR a struggle
between rival classes? (2) to what extent were internal power struggles within
the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) a cause of class struggle?
Or did political elites merely use the language of class struggle to further nonclass related goals? (3) What does the GPCRs emphasis on class teach us about
class structure and struggle socialism in general?
Following the barrage of criticism aimed at the Party during the Hundred Flowers
campaign, Mao came to be concerned about cultural and intellectual elites as
well as the children of the former capitalist classes. This was compounded by the
censure Mao received at the Lushan conference in 1959 due to the perceived
failures of the Great Leap Forward (GLF)1. It was at this time that Mao came to
also harbour suspicions about those within the party, and came to fear the rise of
a new form of bureaucratic class under socialist government.
If indeed the GPCR reflected class conflict in Chinese society, then it follows that
some sort of differentiation between classes must have existed. Therefore, we
must define what is meant by class.
1 Simon Leys, The Chairmans New Clothes Mao and the Cultural Revolution,
(London: Allison and Busby, 1977), p. 24.
structure.
Throughout
the
Yanan
period,
and
later
following
the
2 Anita Chan, Stanley Rosen & Jonathan Unger, Students and Class Warfare: the
Social Roots of the Red Guard Conflict in Guangzhou (Canton), The China
Quarterly, p. 402.
3 The following is based on the lists found in Anita Chan, Stanley Rosen &
Jonathan Unger, Students and Class Warfare: the Social Roots of the Red Guard
Conflict in Guangzhou (Canton), p. 402; and Joel Andreas, Battling over political
and cultural power during the Chinese Cultural Revolution, Theory and Society,
Vol. 31, 2002, p. 468.
Intelligentsia,
including
white-collar
employees
(zhiyuan4)
and
independent professionals.
Bad-class origins (jieji chengfen buhaode)5:
Capitalist families
Rich peasant families
Landlord families
By the beginning of the GPCR general economic equality was prevalent. The
differentiation that did exist was mostly regional, but within a specific province
income levels were fairly homogenous. However, for two reasons there were
disparities between rural and urban areas. Administrative policy generally
favoured an autarkic system of development within the regions 8, thus rather than
developing specialisation through trade, each region would attempt to produce
all products sufficient for its needs. This was compounded by a lack of
infrastructure that would have encouraged trade to develop, especially for the
transportation of goods. Moreover, whilst China was still exceedingly poor in
terms of GDP per capita at this stage, many services were provided by
workplaces in industrial areas. This differed from rural practice, where individuals
were more responsible for their own provision of housing, healthcare, and other
essential services.
The relevance of relative economic equality is that class structure took on new
forms. Non-economic forms of power came to replace general economic notions
of class. This can be seen in what Mao considered the rise of the bureaucratic
class within the Party9. Based on analysis of the Soviet Union by Mao and other
radical theorists, the USSR has undergoing a peaceful evolution from socialism to
8 The concept of self-reliance, zili gengsheng, was applied at both the national
and regional level. At the regional level this was intended to reduce
transportation costs and bottlenecks. Richard Curt Kraus, The Cultural Revolution
a very short introduction, (Hants: Oxford University Press, 2012), p. 67-68.
9 Line struggle is the reflection within the Party of the class struggle in society.
So long as classes, class contradictions and class struggle exist in society, there
must be the struggle between two lines within the Party; Mao Zedong, In branch
construction one must grasp line education, Mao Zedong, In branch
construction one must grasp line education, 26 February, 1971, quoted in
Richard Curt Kraus, Class Conflict and the Vocabulary of Social Analysis in
China, p. 65. For a discussion the struggle between lines or roads within the CCP
and its relation to class see Lowell Dittmer, Line Struggle in Theory and
Practice: The Origins of the Cultural Revolution Reconsidered, The China
Quarterly, Vol. 72, 1977, 680-681.
state capitalism, whereby state officials had become an exploiting class without
fundamentally changing social structure. Since China had followed the Soviet
model of development, Mao feared the Chinese social structure was also
harbouring the seeds of exploitation 10. Mao warned in 1965 that Party officials
were becoming an incipient bureaucratic class, declaring such people [the
bureaucrats] are already or are becoming capitalist vampires to the workers 11.
Chan et al. conclude that class structure during the GPCR was demonstrated by
Red Guard factionalism. The children of the former privileged and middle classes
were the strongest supporters of the Maoist faction within the CCP, as they
sought to benefit from the Maos attack on the CCP and the party cadres and
leaders who now had privileged access to state services at the expense of the
former privileged classes who, under a more meritocratic system, would gain a
greater share. However, those who came from families with connections to the
CCP sought to maintain their new privileges 12, and supported the more
conservative elements within the CCP led by Liu Shaoqi and Deng Xiaoping. This
latter group propagated what came to be known as the bloodline theory
(xuetong lun), which highlighted their own role as children of revolutionaries 13.
10 Joel Andreas, The Structure of Charismatic Mobilization: a case study of
rebellion during the Chinese Cultural Revolution, American Sociological Review,
Vol. 72, June 2007, p. 442.
11 Mao Zedong, Notes on Comrade Chen Ceng-jens Report on his Squatting
Point, Selected Works of Mao Tse-Tung, January 29, 1965, available at
http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/mao/selected-works/volume9/mswv9_47.htm.
12 Richard Curt Kraus, Class Conflict and the Vocabulary of Social Analysis in
China, p. 70.
13 For a discussion see J oel Andreas, Battling over political and cultural power
during the Chinese Cultural Revolution, p. 478-479; Anita Chan, Stanley Rosen &
Jonathan Unger, Students and Class Warfare: the Social Roots of the Red Guard
Conflict in Guangzhou (Canton), p. 426.
Andreas differs somewhat in his analysis from Chan et al. He has explicitly
asserted that the most important aspects of class in post-revolutionary China
were political and cultural power14. Andreas finds, in contrast to the traditional
analysis of class and Red Guard factionalism as exemplified by Chan et al., a
convergence of interests of political and cultural elites based on a shared
hostility to the egalitarianism of the GPCR. Whilst he notes the antagonism
between the classes in certain instances, he also finds that the children of former
peasant revolutionaries who became political elites under CCP rule allied with the
children of the old educated elite, in order to oppose the radical assault on the
existing order, often led by children of peasant origin who possessed neither
cultural nor political capital15.
Rhetorically, it would seem that class played an important role in the GPCR. The
slogan never forget class struggle 16 was prominent and frequent at the
commencement of the GPCR. However, some have questioned the relevance of
class structure and struggle under socialism to the GPCR. Leys, for instance,
asserts that the GPCR was a power struggle within the leadership of the CCP 17,
rather than a movement aimed at combating the emergence of a new form of
class differentiation, and that the language of class struggle and revolution was
in fact deployed simply to mask the real nature and aim of the movement, that
is, of removing Maos rivals and detractors from the CCP. Some have even
referred to the GPCR as an instance of largely contrived class struggle 18. This
conception of the GPCR however, fails to recognise the wider importance of class
for the Chinese population. It is not clear without further research whether nonelites were particularly concerned with the continuity of class differentiation
under socialism, however, what does appear to have mattered to people was
preferential access to those goods and services that higher class status enabled.
Chan et al.s research of students in Guangzhou during the GPCR show that in
the years prior to its the launch of the GPCR (1963-65), students of the jieji
chengfen buhaode or zhiyuan classes were often subjected to (sincere)
exhortations during small-group sessions of classmates (as well as in the media),
to draw a line between themselves and their parents in order to further their
own opportunities to education, urban employment and political advancement 19.
Although such rhetoric may have been employed by Maoist elites to justify
purges within the leadership, it does not account for why such large numbers of
Chinese, especially youth, heeded Maos call to attack those in power. The
catalyst for action amongst radical youths was, in actuality, a response to
Chinas economic opportunities and their own self-interest based on class. This
17 Simon Leys, The Chairmans New Clothes Mao and the Cultural Revolution,
p. 13; Roderick MacFarquhar and Michael Schoenhals, Maos Last Revolution,
(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2006). For a critique MarFarquhar and
Schoenhals Mao-centred approach see Lynn White, Mao and the Cultural
Revolution in China, Journal of Cold War Studies, Vol. 10, No. 2, 2008, p. 98-102;
Tang Tsou, The Cultural Revolution and the Chinese Political System, The China
Quarterly, Vol. 38, 1969, p. 84.
18 Philip Bridgham, Maos Cultural Revolution: Origin and Development, p. 13.
19 Anita Chan, Stanley Rosen & Jonathan Unger, Students and Class Warfare:
the Social Roots of the Red Guard Conflict in Guangzhou (Canton), p. 414.
can be seen by the fact that students from the same inherited class were,
overwhelmingly, members of the same factions of Red Guards, and that the Red
Guard factions which opposed each other had as a base a certain class. As Chan
et al. demonstrate, by the mid-1960s urban high school students faced
narrowing prospects for upward mobility 20, this situation arose concurrently to a
shift towards greater reliance on class origin as a criterion on which educational
opportunities were offered21. Thus class origin became an important factor in
determining ones potential for advancement.
The re-emergence of class as a salient factor in Chinese political discourse was
initiated with the launch of the class struggle by Mao at the Tenth Plenum of the
Central Committee in September 1962 22. Although the reason behind this
campaign may have been the imperative to explain past failures of Party policy,
in particular the GLF, as largely the handiwork of foreign and domestic class
enemies23, rather than an ideological belief in the actual need for a widespread
campaign to battle class structure, the eventual result (i.e. the GPCR) was a class
20 This was due to the baby boom of the 1950s, coupled with a relatively young
established workforce with the result that more and more people were seeking to
fill a limited number of vacancies due to low rates of retirement. Moreover, since
education levels had greatly expanded in the post-revolutionary period, there
were many more educated youths who were in the position of not being able to
obtain urban employment, and were faced to move to more menial positions in
the countryside. Anita Chan, Stanley Rosen & Jonathan Unger, Students and
Class Warfare: the Social Roots of the Red Guard Conflict in Guangzhou
(Canton), p. 398-401.
21 This resulted in increased pressure to be accepted in the Communist Youth
League, and subsequent demonstration of exemplary political behaviour, which
was a further criterion of acceptance into higher education facilities.
22 Philip Bridgham, Maos Cultural Revolution: Origin and Development, The
China Quarterly, No. 41, 1970, p. 8.
23 Ibid. p. 9.
access
to
education,
Party/state
employment,
and
personal
socialism,
but
that
new
classes
arise
in
response
to
changed
against non-elites. Moreover, whilst the GPCR was certainly at one level a
internal power struggle within the CCP, this situation was exploited by those
outside the leadership as an opportunity to further their own class interests, by
either defending or attacking the status quo. Finally, we can conclude that
socialism as an economic and political system, whilst its class structure will be
different to that found under communist of feudal societies, is likely to still
witness
competition
between
classes.
In
fact,
considering
the
greater
centralisation of political and economic power, and thus the greater the benefits
accruing to those who obtain power, it seems intuitive that the factional struggle
for control over the state would be more intense under socialism than under
competing systems of government.
Jeremy Rees
208044
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