Never turn back
China and the forbidden history of the 1980s
- ISBN: 9780674297241
- Editorial: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press
- Fecha de la edición: 2024
- Lugar de la edición: Cambridge (MSS). Estados Unidos de Norteamérica
- Encuadernación: Rústica
- Medidas: 24 cm
- Nº Pág.: 432
- Idiomas: Inglés
On a hike in Guangdong Province in January 1984, Deng Xiaoping was warned that his path was a steep and treacherous one. "Never turn back," the Chinese leader replied. That became a mantra as the government forged ahead with reforms in the face of heated contestation over the nation's future.
Recovering the debates of China in the 1980s, Julian Gewirtz traces the Communist Party's diverse attitudes toward markets, state control, and sweeping technological change, as well as freewheeling public argument over political liberalization. Deng Xiaoping's administration considered bold proposals from within the party and without, but after Tiananmen, Beijing systematically erased these discussions of alternative directions. Using newly available Chinese sources, Gewirtz details how the leadership purged the key reformist politician Zhao Ziyang, quashed the student movement, recast the transformations of the 1980s as the inevitable products of consensus, and indoctrinated China and the international community in the new official narrative.
Never Turn Back offers a revelatory look at how different China's rise might have been and at the foundations of strongman rule under Xi Jinping, who has intensified the policing of history to bolster his own authority.
Introduction Forbidden History
Reassessing History, Recasting Modernization
Part I Ideology and Propaganda
Spiritual Pollutions and Sugar-Coated Bullets
The Scourge of Bourgeois Liberalization
Part II The Economy
Liberating the Productive Forces
The Powers of the Market
Part III Technology
Responding to the New Technological Revolution
A Matter of the Life and Death of the Nation
Part IV Political Modernization
Masters of the Country
Explore without Fear
Part V Before Tiananmen
Two Rounds of Applause
A Great Flood
We Came Too Late
Part VI Tiananmen and After
Political Crackdown and Narrative Crisis
Recasting Reform and Opening
The Socialist Survivor in a Capitalist World
Conclusion A New Era