Description

Book Synopsis

With a population of nearly 1.5 billion and the world’s second largest economy, China is a major player in the world today, and yet many in the West know very little about contemporary China. This book provides a clear, authoritative and up-to-date history of China since 1949, drawing on extensive research to describe and explain the key developments and to dispel the many myths and misconceptions surrounding this twenty-first-century superpower.

In contrast to many commentators who overstate the novelty of the Communist regime, Guiheux emphasizes instead its complex political heritage, highlighting the many continuities it shares with the reformers and revolutionaries of the early twentieth century. At the same time, the ability of China’s authoritarian regime to transform the economy and society is key to understanding its breakneck trajectory of modernization – an ability that, as Guiheux explains, far outweighed the importance and effectiveness of Mao’s utopian vision. Guiheux also aims to ‘de-exoticize’ China. While not on the path of a Western-style modernity, China has experienced the same phenomena that have characterized every historical process of modernization: industrialization, urbanization, bureaucratization and globalization.

This expertly researched history of the People’s Republic of China will be essential reading for all students and scholars of Chinese history and politics, and for anyone interested in contemporary China.



Trade Review

‘A comprehensive and well-balanced account of today’s China and how it evolved, from the political system to culture, from history to twenty-first-century society, set in the context of the long-term national development of the country whose evolution will affect the whole world.’
Jonathan Fenby, author of The Penguin History of Modern China


‘Moving beyond tired frames that stress China’s uniqueness and incommensurability, Guiheux skilfully situates the history of the PRC in broadly comparative terms. Particularly effective is the balance struck between a chronological account and the thematically specific analyses of politics, society, culture and economy. A wonderful achievement of synthesis and insight with much to offer to both specialist and lay reader alike.’
Arunabh Ghosh, Harvard University

‘To many, China is a complicated, threatening and opaque nation. Gilles Guiheux aims to “‘de-exoticize’ China and analyse its transformations in the light of other human societies”, and he succeeds. By the book’s final page, the mysterious and alien become transparent and familiar, serving the reader well as the West strategizes a constructive path forward with the most populous superpower.’
Chris Fenton, Former President of DMG Entertainment Motion Picture Group (China)



Table of Contents
Acknowledgments



Introduction


Chapter One. The establishment of a new regime (1949-1957)

Building a new state

The achievement of unity

The administration of the territories

The strategy of the New Democracy (1949-1953)

The New Institutions (1954)

Society is brought into line

The marriage law (May 1950)

Agrarian reform

The campaign for the repression of counter-revolutionaries (February 1951)

The Three-anti Campaign (December 1951) and the Five-anti Campaign (April 1952) against the bourgeoisie

Bringing intellectuals to heel

Forging links with the socialist camp

The Sino-Soviet alliance

The Korean War

An orthodox economic policy

The Eighth Party Congress (1956)

Conclusion



Chapter Two. Maoism and its excesses (1958-1976)

The origins of the Great Leap Forward

The successive stages of the Great Leap Forward

The Great Famine (1959-1961)

Natural causes

Human errors

Political responsibilities

Pragmatism and political divisions (1960-1965)

Mao’s adjustment program and political withdrawal

The Socialist Education Movement (1962-1965)

The Maoization of the People’s Liberation Army and preparation for war

The Cultural Revolution (1966-1969)

The beginnings (October 1965-July 1966)

The mobilization of the Red Guards (August 1966-January 1967)

Militarization in the face of revolutionary seizures of power (January to August 1967)

The return to order (1967-1969): bringing the Red Guards to heel and the Ninth Congress

Responsibilities and consequences

The end of Maoism and the crises of succession (1969-1976)

The Lin Biao era (1969-1971)

The elimination of Lin Biao in September 1971

The end of Maoism (1972-1976)

Conclusion



Chapter Three. Giving priority to economic modernization (1976-1992)

The Hua Guofeng transition (September 1976-December 1978)

The struggle between two tendencies: neo-Maoists against pragmatists

A veteran to embody renewal

The first reforms (1979-1986)

Deng Xiaoping comes to power

The rehabilitation of the law

The acceleration of reforms (1984-1986)

The failure of Zhao Ziyang and the crisis of the regime (1986-1989)

The aborted political reform

The reimposition of dictatorship

Conclusion



Chapter Four. Building a new model (since 1992)

The Jiang Zemin decade: authoritarian, conservative and pragmatic leadership (1989-2002)

An engineer in power

The rise of nationalism

Jiang Zemin’s consolidation of power

Jiang Zemin’s initiatives

The Hu Jintao - Wen Jiabao Era (2002-2012): a lost decade?

Populist leaders

Crises in Tibet and Sichuan in 2008

Two ‘campaigns of mass distraction’

The fifth generation of leaders in power (since 2012)

The change of political personnel

Xi Jinping, a ‘prince’ in power

Internal authoritarianism

Expansionism abroad

Conclusion



Chapter Five. Forms of government: from arbitrary rule to the aborted attempt at institutionalization

The Communist Party: organization, ideology, adaptation

Party organization

Party members

Ideology

Five generations of leaders

The state apparatus: a democratic façade

Executive power

The elected assemblies

A ‘state of laws without rule of law’

The army in the political system

The Party-State and society: control, participation, resistance

A triple system of repression, confinement and surveillance

Social coalitions supporting the regime

Opponents without opposition

Public space and civil society

Conclusion



Chapter Six. The creation of wealth: from planned economy to the market

The socialist cycle

The place of inheritance

The socialist planned economy

The Great Leap Forward (1958-1960)

Assessment of the Maoist period

The reform cycle

The decollectivization of the countryside

Business reform

1984-1988: take-off

1989-1993, the end of the reforms

The move towards a market economy (1993-2003)

The Hu Jintao-Wen Jiabao administration: a new activism

The economic policy of Xi Jinping and Li Keqiang

An assessment of the structural transformations

The Chinese market economy

The diversification of economic actors

The transformation of the economic role of the state

Restructuring the administration of the economy

The weaknesses of the state

The internationalization of the economy

China and international trade

Conclusion



Chapter Seven. Society on the move: mobility and inequality

Maoist China: From movement to immobilization (1949-1978)

The establishment of the hukou system

Labelling of the population

A nomenklatura: a privileged caste

Political mobility

Society on the move again (since 1979)

The winners

The old working class and the new urban poverty

The new working class: migrant workers

The debate about inequality

A diverse social space

A political project: the construction of the middle classes

The hypothesis of the social divide

Latin Americanization as a possible scenario

Measuring inequalities

Conclusion



Chapter Eight. The towns versus the countryside

The broken promises of the peasant revolution

Maoism sacrifices the peasants

Building a working class

The non-development of cities

The urban miracle: urbanization without revolution

Urban growth: a political choice

Improving housing conditions

New urban governance

New rural issues

The ‘three nong’

Collective action in the countryside

New rural policies

Conclusion



Chapter Nine. Populations: the modernization of society

Counting the population, controlling the demographics

The demographic transition

The pragmatism of Maoist population policies

The one-child policy

The harmful consequences of the one-child policy

Protecting the population: social policies

The Maoist period: protection for those who work

The state’s withdrawal after 1978

The reconstruction of a welfare system

The private and intimate sphere

The family

Forms of sexuality: a liberation?

Homosexuality is now tolerated

Persistent gender inequalities

The individualization of society

The choice of spouse: a freely chosen alliance between two families

Self-interest

The reconfiguration of the religious scene

Conclusion



Chapter Ten. Education and culture

Education and science

Education (1949-1976): priority given to the early years

The massification, marketization and internationalization of higher education since 1979

Persistent problems: selectivity, inequality

The professionalization and internationalization of scientific activity since 1979

Culture and creation

Culture at the service of the political project (1949-1979)

A decade of experiments (1979-1989)

Culture opens up to the market

Cultural policies: the case of museums

Conclusion



Epilogue



Map

Title-holders of the main positions in the government of the People’s Republic of China (1949-2018)

Chronology

Bibliography

Index

Contemporary China: 1949 to the Present

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    A Hardback by Gilles Guiheux, Andrew Brown

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      View other formats and editions of Contemporary China: 1949 to the Present by Gilles Guiheux

      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 19/05/2023
      ISBN13: 9781509552498, 978-1509552498
      ISBN10: 1509552499

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      With a population of nearly 1.5 billion and the world’s second largest economy, China is a major player in the world today, and yet many in the West know very little about contemporary China. This book provides a clear, authoritative and up-to-date history of China since 1949, drawing on extensive research to describe and explain the key developments and to dispel the many myths and misconceptions surrounding this twenty-first-century superpower.

      In contrast to many commentators who overstate the novelty of the Communist regime, Guiheux emphasizes instead its complex political heritage, highlighting the many continuities it shares with the reformers and revolutionaries of the early twentieth century. At the same time, the ability of China’s authoritarian regime to transform the economy and society is key to understanding its breakneck trajectory of modernization – an ability that, as Guiheux explains, far outweighed the importance and effectiveness of Mao’s utopian vision. Guiheux also aims to ‘de-exoticize’ China. While not on the path of a Western-style modernity, China has experienced the same phenomena that have characterized every historical process of modernization: industrialization, urbanization, bureaucratization and globalization.

      This expertly researched history of the People’s Republic of China will be essential reading for all students and scholars of Chinese history and politics, and for anyone interested in contemporary China.



      Trade Review

      ‘A comprehensive and well-balanced account of today’s China and how it evolved, from the political system to culture, from history to twenty-first-century society, set in the context of the long-term national development of the country whose evolution will affect the whole world.’
      Jonathan Fenby, author of The Penguin History of Modern China


      ‘Moving beyond tired frames that stress China’s uniqueness and incommensurability, Guiheux skilfully situates the history of the PRC in broadly comparative terms. Particularly effective is the balance struck between a chronological account and the thematically specific analyses of politics, society, culture and economy. A wonderful achievement of synthesis and insight with much to offer to both specialist and lay reader alike.’
      Arunabh Ghosh, Harvard University

      ‘To many, China is a complicated, threatening and opaque nation. Gilles Guiheux aims to “‘de-exoticize’ China and analyse its transformations in the light of other human societies”, and he succeeds. By the book’s final page, the mysterious and alien become transparent and familiar, serving the reader well as the West strategizes a constructive path forward with the most populous superpower.’
      Chris Fenton, Former President of DMG Entertainment Motion Picture Group (China)



      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments



      Introduction


      Chapter One. The establishment of a new regime (1949-1957)

      Building a new state

      The achievement of unity

      The administration of the territories

      The strategy of the New Democracy (1949-1953)

      The New Institutions (1954)

      Society is brought into line

      The marriage law (May 1950)

      Agrarian reform

      The campaign for the repression of counter-revolutionaries (February 1951)

      The Three-anti Campaign (December 1951) and the Five-anti Campaign (April 1952) against the bourgeoisie

      Bringing intellectuals to heel

      Forging links with the socialist camp

      The Sino-Soviet alliance

      The Korean War

      An orthodox economic policy

      The Eighth Party Congress (1956)

      Conclusion



      Chapter Two. Maoism and its excesses (1958-1976)

      The origins of the Great Leap Forward

      The successive stages of the Great Leap Forward

      The Great Famine (1959-1961)

      Natural causes

      Human errors

      Political responsibilities

      Pragmatism and political divisions (1960-1965)

      Mao’s adjustment program and political withdrawal

      The Socialist Education Movement (1962-1965)

      The Maoization of the People’s Liberation Army and preparation for war

      The Cultural Revolution (1966-1969)

      The beginnings (October 1965-July 1966)

      The mobilization of the Red Guards (August 1966-January 1967)

      Militarization in the face of revolutionary seizures of power (January to August 1967)

      The return to order (1967-1969): bringing the Red Guards to heel and the Ninth Congress

      Responsibilities and consequences

      The end of Maoism and the crises of succession (1969-1976)

      The Lin Biao era (1969-1971)

      The elimination of Lin Biao in September 1971

      The end of Maoism (1972-1976)

      Conclusion



      Chapter Three. Giving priority to economic modernization (1976-1992)

      The Hua Guofeng transition (September 1976-December 1978)

      The struggle between two tendencies: neo-Maoists against pragmatists

      A veteran to embody renewal

      The first reforms (1979-1986)

      Deng Xiaoping comes to power

      The rehabilitation of the law

      The acceleration of reforms (1984-1986)

      The failure of Zhao Ziyang and the crisis of the regime (1986-1989)

      The aborted political reform

      The reimposition of dictatorship

      Conclusion



      Chapter Four. Building a new model (since 1992)

      The Jiang Zemin decade: authoritarian, conservative and pragmatic leadership (1989-2002)

      An engineer in power

      The rise of nationalism

      Jiang Zemin’s consolidation of power

      Jiang Zemin’s initiatives

      The Hu Jintao - Wen Jiabao Era (2002-2012): a lost decade?

      Populist leaders

      Crises in Tibet and Sichuan in 2008

      Two ‘campaigns of mass distraction’

      The fifth generation of leaders in power (since 2012)

      The change of political personnel

      Xi Jinping, a ‘prince’ in power

      Internal authoritarianism

      Expansionism abroad

      Conclusion



      Chapter Five. Forms of government: from arbitrary rule to the aborted attempt at institutionalization

      The Communist Party: organization, ideology, adaptation

      Party organization

      Party members

      Ideology

      Five generations of leaders

      The state apparatus: a democratic façade

      Executive power

      The elected assemblies

      A ‘state of laws without rule of law’

      The army in the political system

      The Party-State and society: control, participation, resistance

      A triple system of repression, confinement and surveillance

      Social coalitions supporting the regime

      Opponents without opposition

      Public space and civil society

      Conclusion



      Chapter Six. The creation of wealth: from planned economy to the market

      The socialist cycle

      The place of inheritance

      The socialist planned economy

      The Great Leap Forward (1958-1960)

      Assessment of the Maoist period

      The reform cycle

      The decollectivization of the countryside

      Business reform

      1984-1988: take-off

      1989-1993, the end of the reforms

      The move towards a market economy (1993-2003)

      The Hu Jintao-Wen Jiabao administration: a new activism

      The economic policy of Xi Jinping and Li Keqiang

      An assessment of the structural transformations

      The Chinese market economy

      The diversification of economic actors

      The transformation of the economic role of the state

      Restructuring the administration of the economy

      The weaknesses of the state

      The internationalization of the economy

      China and international trade

      Conclusion



      Chapter Seven. Society on the move: mobility and inequality

      Maoist China: From movement to immobilization (1949-1978)

      The establishment of the hukou system

      Labelling of the population

      A nomenklatura: a privileged caste

      Political mobility

      Society on the move again (since 1979)

      The winners

      The old working class and the new urban poverty

      The new working class: migrant workers

      The debate about inequality

      A diverse social space

      A political project: the construction of the middle classes

      The hypothesis of the social divide

      Latin Americanization as a possible scenario

      Measuring inequalities

      Conclusion



      Chapter Eight. The towns versus the countryside

      The broken promises of the peasant revolution

      Maoism sacrifices the peasants

      Building a working class

      The non-development of cities

      The urban miracle: urbanization without revolution

      Urban growth: a political choice

      Improving housing conditions

      New urban governance

      New rural issues

      The ‘three nong’

      Collective action in the countryside

      New rural policies

      Conclusion



      Chapter Nine. Populations: the modernization of society

      Counting the population, controlling the demographics

      The demographic transition

      The pragmatism of Maoist population policies

      The one-child policy

      The harmful consequences of the one-child policy

      Protecting the population: social policies

      The Maoist period: protection for those who work

      The state’s withdrawal after 1978

      The reconstruction of a welfare system

      The private and intimate sphere

      The family

      Forms of sexuality: a liberation?

      Homosexuality is now tolerated

      Persistent gender inequalities

      The individualization of society

      The choice of spouse: a freely chosen alliance between two families

      Self-interest

      The reconfiguration of the religious scene

      Conclusion



      Chapter Ten. Education and culture

      Education and science

      Education (1949-1976): priority given to the early years

      The massification, marketization and internationalization of higher education since 1979

      Persistent problems: selectivity, inequality

      The professionalization and internationalization of scientific activity since 1979

      Culture and creation

      Culture at the service of the political project (1949-1979)

      A decade of experiments (1979-1989)

      Culture opens up to the market

      Cultural policies: the case of museums

      Conclusion



      Epilogue



      Map

      Title-holders of the main positions in the government of the People’s Republic of China (1949-2018)

      Chronology

      Bibliography

      Index

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