LEADER 00000cam 2200913Ki 4500 001 ocn815382530 003 OCoLC 005 20181120084039.2 006 m o d 007 cr |n||||||||| 008 120606s2012 ne ob 001 0 eng d 019 923709044|a1058100036 020 9789048515912|q(electronic bk.) 020 9048515912|q(electronic bk.) 020 |z9789089644107 020 |z9089644105 020 |z9781283698320 020 |z1283698323 035 (OCoLC)815382530|z(OCoLC)923709044|z(OCoLC)1058100036 037 401082|bMIL 037 22573/ctt6dxw2b|bJSTOR 040 CDX|beng|epn|erda|cCDX|dOCLCQ|dCUS|dNTE|dOCLCF|dDKDLA |dOCLCQ|dJSTOR|dOCL|dOCLCQ|dCGU|dOCLCQ|dEBLCP|dOCLCQ|dCOO |dAGLDB|dOTZ|dMERUC|dOCLCQ|dIOG|dZCU|dOAPEN|dSTF|dICG|dTXC |dAU@|dOCLCQ|dWYU 043 a-cc--- 049 CKEA 050 4 DS777.56|b.H827 2012 082 04 320.451 100 1 Hu, Ping,|d1947- 245 14 The thought remolding campaign of the Chinese Communist Party State. 264 1 Amsterdam :|bAmsterdam University Press,|c2012. 300 1 online resource (308 pages). 336 text|btxt|2rdacontent 337 computer|bc|2rdamedia 338 online resource|bcr|2rdacarrier 347 data file|2rda 490 1 AUP - ICAS Publications ;|vv. 7 504 Includes bibliographical references and index. 505 80 |tThe 1949 Revolution Was Not the Victory of a Political Idea --|tOn "Following a Doctrine without Understanding it" --|tIs it True that They Were "Completely Convinced"? --|tIntangible Pressure --|tFrom "Killing a Chicken to Frighten the Monkeys" to "Killing a Monkey to Frighten the Other Monkeys" --|tA Monistic System of Value Standards: Concepts and Structure --|tWhy Was Remolding Aimed at the Intelligentsia? --|tThe Bifurcated Essence of Thought Remolding --|tThe Coercion of Truth --|tThe Utility of Truth --|tThe Class Nature of Truth and the Problem of Standpoint --|tBeware of "Begging the Question" --|tThe Ambiguity of Facts --|tThe Ambiguity of Values -- |tConformity --|tConsistency --|tThe Belief that the World is Just --|tPursuing Meaning in Life --|g3.|tHow Has Thought Remolding Been Implemented? --|t"With Machine Guns Pinning You Down on Three Sides, You're Allowed to Head off in Only One Direction." 505 80 |tMobilizing Others to Receive Instruction --|t"First Impressions are the Strongest" and "Once You Form a Habit, Following it Comes Naturally" --|tThe Power of Oversimplification --|t"Giving an Injection of a Preventive Inoculation" --|tThe Hierarchical System of "Study" [xuexi] --|tAn Affective Style of Propaganda -- |tThe Controlling Function of Collective Rituals -- |tCriticism and Self-Criticism --|tFrom Prohibition to Renunciation --|tThe Transition from Compelled Conduct to Voluntary Conduct --|tThe Strategy of Violating Dignity -- |tThe Chastity of Those Who Have Lost Their Chastity -- |tThe Psychology of a Shortage of Rewards --|tThought Remolding and the Chinese Cultural Tradition --|tGetting Enmeshed in a Cocoon of One's Own Weaving --|tSome "Doctor" Indeed --|tVarious Methods of Punishment --|tA Remarkable Effect of the "Downward Transfer to the Countryside for Manual Labor." 505 80 |tThe First Strategy of Criticism: A Ferocious Clap (1) -- |tA Ferocious Clap (2) --|tThe Second Strategy of Criticism: Isolation within the Crowd (1) --|tIsolation within the Crowd (2) --|tSpiritual Homelessness, Isolation and the Lack of Support --|tFrom Confusion to Submission - -|tThe Emotional Need to Identify with One's Oppressors -- |tSelf-conscious Sacrifice --|tThe Trap of Toughening and Putting to the Test --|tThe Language Demon --|tWhy Must Self-criticism Be Carried out in Public? --|tThe Destruction of Self-discipline --|tThe Destruction of External Discipline --|tUtilizing the Sense of Shame to Shatter the Sense of Shame --|tA Myth about Laborers --|tA Reflection -- or an Image "in Reverse"? --|tFilial Devotion and Loyalty to the Rulers --|tBegin in Obedience and End in Obedience --|tGetting "Well-Remolded" Amounts to Getting Intimidated --|tRemolding is Nothing Other than Taming. 505 80 |tIn Evading Freedom, One Evades Responsibility --|g4.|tOn Evasion --|tEvasion by Foot-dragging --|tThe Rejected and the Weary --|tIdealists Who Went Astray --|tRebellion among Evaders --|tBetween Taming and Rebellion --|tThe Legitimization of Evasion --|tEvasion as Being Tamed -- |tEvading the Persecuted --|tIndifference and Forgetfulness --|tThe Rationalization of Evasion --|g5. |tOn Rebellion --|tWhat is Rebellion? --|tThe Meaning of Writing a Letter to Chairman Mao --|tFormat is More Important Than Content --|tRegarding Subconscious Rebellion --|tOpposing Thought Remolding and Opposing Totalitarian Rule --|tEarthquakes from within the System - -|tThe Bankruptcy of Phony Politics --|tThe Rebellion of Liberalism --|tThe Current Condition of Liberalism -- |tGaining the Privilege of Rebellion --|g6.|tThe Bane of Cynicism --|tAuthoritarianism and Cynics --|tThe Communist Party and Cynicism. 505 80 |tWhat Does "the Transition from a Revolutionary Party to a Ruling Party" Mean? --|tWhy is It "No to Reform and Wait for Death; Yes to Reform and Court Death"? --|tCynicism and Fear -- and the Notion that You Are "Better-Off Muddleheaded" --|tThe Idea of Liberal Democracy -- Only with Faith in it is it Efficacious --|tHip Cynicism -- |tDoctrinal Cynicism --|tThe Political Game of Pretending to Obey --|tThe Cynic's Self-deception and Deceiving of Others --|g7.|tStruggling for the Freedom of Thought -- |tQuandaries of Existence --|tAn Analysis of Some Peculiar Phenomena --|tWhy Are There Still People Who Want to Join the Party? --|tWhy Some Dissidents Are Willing to Remain in the Party. 505 80 |tWhy Some Persons Severely Persecuted by the CCP Would Continue to Express Their Loyalty to the CCP --|tWhy Do Party Members Rarely Withdraw from the Party, and Why Do Officials Rarely Resign? --|tWhy Would Many Persons Still Remain Within the System Even When Various Exits are Available? --|tWhy Do Quite a Few People Always Place Their Hopes in the CCP? --|tRational Choice Theory -- |tNormative Theory --|tThe Power of Example -- |tStructuralist Theory --|tCoercion and Incentives for By- Products --|tThe Impact of Societal Scale on Collective Action --|tThe Necessity and Limitations of Drawing on Official Mass Communication Outlets --|tA Struggle for Recognition --|tDesire, Reason and Spiritedness -- |tKnowledge and Behavior --|tThe Special Features of Late Communist Totalitarian Rule --|tDauntlessly Moving Forward in a Measured Stride. 520 This authoritative work on the Chinese Communist party's practices of reeducation and indoctrination, supersedes all previous works by bringing into account recent events. Hu Ping has provided a rich and rigorous study based not only in historical research and numerous compelling case studies of Chinese intellectuals, but also in a first person account of his own experience of Maoist thought "remolding." The Thought Remolding Campaign of the Chinese Communist Party-State is an important history not only of the reeducation programs, but of the interrogation processes of the Party, and the strat. 588 0 Print version record. 648 7 Since 1949|2fast 650 0 Intellectual freedom|zChina. 650 0 Brainwashing|zChina. 650 0 Communist self-criticism. 650 7 POLITICAL SCIENCE|xPublic Policy|xGeneral.|2bisacsh 650 7 20th century history: c 1900 to c 2000.|2bicssc 650 7 Asia.|2bicssc 650 7 China.|2bicssc 650 7 East Asia, Far East.|2bicssc 650 7 History.|2bicssc 650 7 History: earliest times to present day.|2bicssc 650 7 Humanities.|2bicssc 650 7 Marxism and Communism.|2bicssc 650 7 Political control and freedoms.|2bicssc 650 7 Political ideologies.|2bicssc 650 7 Political oppression and persecution.|2bicssc 650 7 Political structure and processes.|2bicssc 650 7 Political structures: totalitarianism and dictatorship. |2bicssc 650 7 Politics and government.|2bicssc 650 7 Postwar 20th century history, from c 1945 to c 2000. |2bicssc 650 7 Society and culture: general.|2bicssc 650 7 Society and social sciences Society and social sciences. |2bicssc 650 7 Brainwashing.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst00837790 650 7 Communist self-criticism.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst00870600 650 7 Intellectual freedom.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst00975768 650 7 Politics and government.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst01919741 651 0 China|xPolitics and government|y1949- 651 7 China.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst01206073 776 08 |iPrint version:|aHu, Ping, 1947-|tThought remolding campaign of the Chinese Communist Party-state.|dAmsterdam : Amsterdam University Press, ©2012|z9789089644107 |w(OCoLC)794707006 830 0 AUP - ICAS Publications. 914 ocn815382530 994 92|bCKE
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