Sowing the Seeds of Democracy in China: Political Reform in the Deng Xiaoping Era

Sowing the Seeds of Democracy in China: Political Reform in the Deng Xiaoping Era

by Merle Goldman (Author)

Synopsis

The West's leading authority on the role of intellectuals in contemporary China presents a percipient account of the efforts at political reform in the Deng Xiaoping era. Merle Goldman describes a group of highly placed intellectuals who, with the patronage of Deng Xiaoping's designated successors Hu Yaobang and then Zhao Ziyang, attempted to reshape both China's Marxist-Leninist ideology and its political system.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 444
Edition: Revised ed.
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Published: 05 Apr 1995

ISBN 10: 0674830083
ISBN 13: 9780674830080

Media Reviews
[A] definitive study of China's dissidents...[Goldman] is the foremost Western expert on China's intellectual dissidents--especially writers--since the founding of the People's Republic in 1949...Whenever one seeks an explanation, Goldman furnishes it. -- Jonathan Mirsky New York Times Book Review Goldman selects about three dozen figures for careful study...Some of the subjects...appear in one of [her] two earlier books (Literary Dissent in Communist China and China's Intellectuals). The three books are similar in style, chronologically consecutive, and together make a comprehensive and shrewdly analytical history of the battles that have taken place over dissident thought in Communist China. -- Perry Link New York Review of Books The title of Goldman's new volume is misleading: the book is not simply a recounting of political reform (or its lack) in post-Mao China, but a fascinating account of how China's intellectuals sought to produce such reform in a sometimes favorable, but often hostile, environment. We learn an enormous amount from this book about who the important intellectual actors are in post-Mao China as well as about their views, activities, and relationship to elites and how each of these changed during the course of the era. Goldman's interesting conclusion is that China's intellectuals largely failed in their efforts to bring about political reform through the traditional means of appealing to elite sponsors and acting as the voice of the masses. Journal of Interdisciplinary History Goldman's book is a valuable addition to a growing literature which seeks to understand the changing nature of Chinese politics in the wake of the economic reform. -- Zhimin Lin Review of Politics Until now, no work has adequately probed the intellectual climate of China's decade of reform ending in the Tiananmen drama of May-June 1989. With sensitivity to both the Confucian and Maoist past, Goldman, in a gripping narrative, reviews the lives and activities of a host of intellectual gadflies. Virginia Quarterly Review
Author Bio
Merle Goldman is Professor of History, Emerita, at Boston University and Associate of the Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies at Harvard University.