by RoderickMacFarquhar (Editor), JohnK.Fairbank (Editor)
Volume 15 of The Cambridge History of China is the second of two volumes dealing with the People's Republic of China since its birth in 1949. The harbingers of the Cultural Revolution were analyzed in Volume 14 and Volume 15 traces a course of events still only partially understood by most Chinese. It begins by analysing the development of Mao's thought since the Communist seizure of power, and, in doing so, attempts to understand why he launched the movement. The contributors grapple with the conflict of evidence between what was said favourably about the Cultural Revolution at the time and the often diametrically opposed retrospective accounts. Volume 15, together with Volume 14, provides the most comprehensive and clearest account of how revolutionary China has developed in response to the upheavals initiated by Mao and Teng Hsiao-p'ing.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 1134
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 29 Nov 1991
ISBN 10: 0521243378
ISBN 13: 9780521243377
Book Overview: Volume 15 considers the developments in Mao's thoughts and how they related to China's government in this account of a turbulent period in Chinese history.