Capitalist roader

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In anti-capitalist Mao Zedong thought, a capitalist roader (simplified Chinese: 走资派; traditional Chinese: 走資派; pinyin: Zǒuzīpài; also simplified Chinese: 走资本主义道路的当权派; traditional Chinese: 走資本主義道路的當權派; pinyin: Zǒu zīběnzhǔyì dàolù de dāngquánpài) is a person or group who demonstrates a marked tendency to bow to pressure from bourgeois forces and subsequently attempts to pull the Revolution in a capitalist direction. If allowed to do so, these forces would eventually restore the political and economic rule of capitalism; in other words, these forces would lead a society down a "capitalist road".[1]

History[]

The term first appeared in Communist Party of China literature in 1965 however, the term within anti-capitalist Maoist thinking can be traced back to the Hungarian Uprising.[2] Whilst the Hungarian Uprising was taking place, Chairman Mao saw "Soviet autocratic rule" in the Eastern Bloc as improper and no longer representing the needs of the Hungarian people.[3] Mao was critical of the Soviet Union's presence and intervention in Hungary, a standpoint that would eventually lead to the Sino-Soviet split. He believed that Hungarian Socialist Workers Party members divorced their leadership from the people, which therefore allowed for economic revision back to capitalism.[1]

Mao used this example in his 1956 meeting with the Chinese Politburo to adjust internal mechanisms to tighten power restrictions within the party in favor of not divorcing the party from their people's communism.[1] This meeting took place during the Hundred Flowers Campaign where Mao invited criticism of the CPC from civilians and intellectuals.[4] The feedback received was critical of Mao and CPC members.[1] Liu Binyan a party cadre of Mao, argued that people who were critical of the CPC should be shortlisted as enemies of the CPC.[1] Additionally, Binyan argued that members of the CPC who were critical of the CPC were 'capitalist roaders' that destroyed the internal mechanisms of the party.[1]

During the Cultural Revolution, Mao proclaimed that greater effort must be focused on CPC members who follow the capitalist road.[5] Mao described roaders as "ambitionists, conspirators, and hypocrites of the exploiting class".[6] He asked the public to coordinate criticism of local CPC members who seemed to be capitalist roaders.[7]

Usage in critique of Deng Xiaoping[]

Mao contended that Deng Xiaoping was a capitalist roader and that the Soviet Union fell to capitalist roaders from within the Communist Party of the Soviet Union after the death of Joseph Stalin in 1953.[8][9] Deng Xiaoping was the successor to Mao as leader of the CPC. Deng was a lifelong CPC member and was committed to the party's approach since he was a young boy.[1]

In mid-1975 with the blessing of an absent Mao who was tending to personal ailments, Deng was granted complete leadership and power in China and initiated many reforms that attempted to resolve the alleged mistakes he saw with the cultural revolution.[10] Reforms that have since been labelled as a process of de-Maoification as he adjusted CPC policy instated previously by Mao which included changes to education, personnel, economics, science and technology in his 'four modernisations policy'.[11][12] Mao was an advocate of practical education outside of the classroom.[13] Deng's reforms to educational policy limited this experience and instead focused on classroom education which Mao cited was one that made Deng was a capitalist roader.[14]

Upon the death of Zhou Enlai, a popular Chinese politician, and public dissident to Deng's reforms, the late Mao backpedaled on his appointment and carried out a program the criticise Deng Xiaoping campaign.[15] This program was an extension of the cultural revolution and allowed students in Beijing to protest in Tiananmen Square and other Chinese cities after backlash to Deng's 'four modernisations policy'.[16] One poster during this campaign read "Deng, that unrepentant capitalist roader, is back on the road again".[17] Deng was further criticized in the 1970s, in the People's Daily of the CCCPC, with accusations of alleging Deng attempted to sabotage the revolution.[18]

Deng Xiaoping on Spring Shoots[]

The film Spring Shoots used the Cultural Revolution as its theme.[19] The film was released for the first of October nineteen seventy-five when,' according to the eulogies, 'it immediately began to demonstrate its role as a tool in the class struggle'.[20] Deng Xiaoping infamously left the film with the denouncement that it was ultra-leftist, and delivered the famous line in rejection of the hundred flowers campaign, 'let a single flower bloom'.[21] The film upset Deng as he explained, its target was the party capitalist roaders.[22]

Usage in academic scholarship outside of China[]

The term capitalist roader has had influence after the death of Mao and continues to be used in a variety of anti-capitalist scholarships. Indian journalist and activist Arup Baisya, used the term capitalist roaders to describe Soviet politicians after the death of Stalin who steered economic policy towards market socialism.[23] Panamanian economist Keith Griffin described Karl Marx as having moved past a capitalist roader due to his understanding of village-based communism without industrialisation.[24]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Chan, Sylvia (July 1979). "The Image of a "Capitalist Roader"--Some Dissident Short Stories in the Hundred Flowers Period". The Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs. College of Asia and the Pacific, The Australian National University. 2 (2): 77–102. doi:10.2307/2158732. JSTOR 2158732. S2CID 147609086.
  2. ^ Zhu, Dandan (2016). "China's Involvement in the Hungarian Revolution, October-November 1956" (PDF). Corvinus Journal of International Affairs. 1:3: 78.
  3. ^ Zhu, Dandan (2016). "China's Involvement in the Hungarian Revolution, October-November 1956" (PDF). Corvinus Journal of International Affairs. 1:3: 85.
  4. ^ MacFarquhar, Roderick (1989). "The Secret Speeches of Chairman Mao". Harvard Contemporary China Series. 6: 6.
  5. ^ Tse-tung, Mao (1 April 1969). "Our Strategy". Chinese Law & Government. 2 (1): 7. doi:10.2753/CLG0009-460902013.
  6. ^ Tse-tung, Mao (1 April 1969). "Our Strategy". Chinese Law & Government. 2 (1): 7-8. doi:10.2753/CLG0009-460902013.
  7. ^ Tse-tung, Mao (1 April 1969). "Our Strategy". Chinese Law & Government. 2 (1): 10. doi:10.2753/CLG0009-460902013.
  8. ^ Henry He (2016). Dictionary of the Political Thought of the People's Republic of China. Taylor & Francis. p. 713. ISBN 9781315500430.
  9. ^ Berch Berberoglu (2006). The State and Revolution in the Twentieth-Century: Major Social Transformations of Our Time. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 70. ISBN 9781461645696.
  10. ^ Zweig, David (1 March 2016). "A Photo Essay of a Failed Reform. Beida, Tiananmen Square and the Defeat of Deng Xiaoping in 1975-76". China Perspectives. 2016 (2016/1): 5–28. doi:10.4000/chinaperspectives.6893.
  11. ^ Guo, Jian (2015). Historical dictionary of the Chinese Cultural Revolution (Second ed.). Lanham, Maryland. ISBN 978-1442251724.
  12. ^ Zweig, David (1 March 2016). "A Photo Essay of a Failed Reform. Beida, Tiananmen Square and the Defeat of Deng Xiaoping in 1975-76". China Perspectives. 2016 (2016/1): 5–28. doi:10.4000/chinaperspectives.6893.
  13. ^ Niu, Xiaodong (1996). "Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping: A comparison of educational thought". Comparative and International Education. 25 (1). doi:10.5206/cie-eci.v25i1.9017.
  14. ^ Gong, Qian (1 June 2015). "Masters of the Nation. Representation of the industrial worker in films of the Cultural Revolution period (1966-1976)". China Perspectives. 2015 (2015/2): 15–23. doi:10.4000/chinaperspectives.6690.
  15. ^ Zweig, David (1 March 2016). "A Photo Essay of a Failed Reform. Beida, Tiananmen Square and the Defeat of Deng Xiaoping in 1975-76". China Perspectives. 2016 (2016/1): 5–28. doi:10.4000/chinaperspectives.6893.
  16. ^ Guo, Jian (2015). Historical dictionary of the Chinese Cultural Revolution (Second ed.). Lanham, Maryland. ISBN 9781442251724.
  17. ^ Zweig, David (1 March 2016). "A Photo Essay of a Failed Reform. Beida, Tiananmen Square and the Defeat of Deng Xiaoping in 1975-76". China Perspectives. 2016 (2016/1): 11. doi:10.4000/chinaperspectives.6893.
  18. ^ "China: the case against the 'capitalist roaders'". Survival: Global Politics and Strategy. 18 (3): 128–129. 1976-05-01. doi:10.1080/00396337608441617. ISSN 0039-6338.
  19. ^ Hilton, Isabel (1981). "A hundred flowers or poisonous weeds? Fluctuations blight the Chinese cinema". Index on Censorship. 10 (4): 3. doi:10.1080/03064228108533228. S2CID 141965433.
  20. ^ Hilton, Isabel (1981). "A hundred flowers or poisonous weeds? Fluctuations blight the Chinese cinema". Index on Censorship. 10 (4): 3. doi:10.1080/03064228108533228. S2CID 141965433.
  21. ^ Hilton, Isabel (1981). "A hundred flowers or poisonous weeds? Fluctuations blight the Chinese cinema". Index on Censorship. 10 (4): 3. doi:10.1080/03064228108533228. S2CID 141965433.
  22. ^ Hilton, Isabel (1981). "A hundred flowers or poisonous weeds? Fluctuations blight the Chinese cinema". Index on Censorship. 10 (4): 3. doi:10.1080/03064228108533228. S2CID 141965433.
  23. ^ Baisya, Arup (2011). "'The Left in Decline': A Historical Perspective" (PDF). Economic and Political Weekly. 46 (47): 78. JSTOR 41720528.
  24. ^ Griffin, Keith; Bideleux, Robert (March 1986). "Communism and Development". The Economic Journal. 96 (381): 240. doi:10.2307/2233448. JSTOR 2233448.



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