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Home > Articles > Legacies: Victims, Morality & Culture
28.04.2008
This paper looks at an important yet little known component of what Chinese Communist Party Chairman Mao Zedong designated the 'dictatorship of the masses' - the outsourcing by the supreme state leadership of selected surveillance, inquisitorial and other violent tasks to what in a different political system would have been regarded as simply members of the public and/or non-governmental organizations. Making use of rare archival records, the paper documents the activities in the summer of 1967 of a group of eager and enthusiastic Beijing university students tasked by the highest authority with substantiating a case of alleged treachery by Mao's nemesis and top-priority target of his Cultural Revolution, the PRC President Liu Shaoqi. Rather than merely build a single-strand narrative around this example of mass dictatorship in action and set out to prove the complicity of members of China's public in state-sanctioned atrocity, the paper attempts to transcend such simple dichotomizing 'perpetrators vs victims' explanatory schemes by choosing a trope that allows for multiple and alternative readings of history.
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