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Mao: The Unknown Story

Mao: The Unknown Story is a 2005 biography of the Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong (1893–1976) that was written by the husband-and-wife team of the writer Jung Chang and the historian Jon Halliday, who detail Mao's early life, his introduction to the Chinese Communist Party, and his political career. The book summarizes Mao's transition from a rebel against the autocratic Kuomintang government to the totalitarian dictator over the People's Republic of China. Chang and Halliday heavily cover Mao's role in the planning and the execution of the Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution. In that capacity, they note that Mao is responsible for an unprecedented death toll during peacetime that ranged from 40 to 70 million people.[1]

Mao: The Unknown Story
First edition cover
AuthorsJung Chang
Jon Halliday
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
SubjectMao Zedong
PublisherJonathan Cape
Publication date
2 June 2005
Media typePrint (hardcover)
Pages814
ISBN9780224071260

In conducting their research for the book over the course of a decade, the authors interviewed hundreds of people who were close to Mao at some point in his life, used recently-published memoirs from Chinese political figures, and explored newly-opened archives in China and Russia. Chang had herself lived through the turmoil of the Cultural Revolution, which she described in her earlier book Wild Swans (1991).[2]

The book quickly became a best-seller in Europe and North America.[3] It received overwhelming praise from reviews in national newspapers and drew praise from some academics[4] but mostly critical or mixed by others.[5] Reviews from many China specialists were critical and cite inaccuracies and selectivity in the use of sources and the polemical portrayal of Mao.[6][7][8]

Synopsis

Chang and Halliday do not accept the idealistic explanations for Mao's rise to power or common claims for his rule. They portray him as a tyrant who manipulated everyone and everything he could in pursuit of personal power.[9] They state that from his earliest years he was motivated by a lust for power and that Mao had many political opponents arrested and murdered, regardless of their relationship with him. During the 1920s and 1930s, they write that Mao could not have gained control of the party without Stalin's patronage, nor were Mao's decisions during the Long March as heroic and ingenious as Edgar Snow's Red Star Over China claimed and thereby entered the mythology of the revolution.[2] Chiang Kai-shek deliberately did not pursue and capture the Red Army.[10] Chang wrote this biography to debunk the myth of Mao as an emblem of Chinese government that survives into the 21st century.[9]

Areas under Communist control during the Second United Front and Chinese Civil War, such as the Jiangxi and Yan'an soviets, were ruled through terror and financed by opium. They say that Mao sacrificed thousands of troops for the purpose of getting rid of party rivals, such as Chang Kuo-tao, and he did not take the initiative in fighting the Japanese invaders. Despite being born into a wealthy peasant (kulak) family, Mao had little concern for the welfare of the Chinese peasantry when he came to power in 1949. Mao's determination to use agricultural surplus to subsidize industry and intimidation of dissent led to murderous famines resulting from the Great Leap Forward, exacerbated by allowing the export of grain to continue even when it became clear that China did not have sufficient grain to feed its population.[citation needed]

Long March

Chang and Halliday said that the Long March was not the courageous effort portrayed by the Chinese Communist Party and that Mao's role in leading it was exaggerated. Chang refers to the march as a myth that has been tweaked and exaggerated throughout the decades by the Chinese government. They write that today the Long March's validity is questionable, because it has diverged so far from reality. Officially portrayed as an inspiring commander, the authors write that he was nearly left behind by the March and only commanded a fairly small force. He was apparently disliked by almost all of the people on the March and his tactics and strategy were flawed. They also write that Chiang Kai-shek allowed the Communists to proceed without significant hindrance. They provided the communists with maps and allowed them to escape the clutches of his army because his son was being held hostage in Moscow and he feared he would be killed if the Communists failed.[citation needed]

Mao is also portrayed, along with the Communist elite, as a privileged person who was usually carried around in litters and protected from the suffering of his subordinates, rather than sharing their hardship. Despite the high level of casualties amongst ordinary soldiers, supposedly no high-ranking leaders died on the journey, regardless of how ill or badly wounded they were. The book says that, contrary to revolutionary mythology, there was no battle at Luding Bridge and that tales of a "heroic" crossing against the odds was merely propaganda. Chang found a witness, Li Xiu-zhen, who told her that she saw no fighting and that the bridge was not on fire. In addition, she said that despite claims by the Communists that the fighting was fierce, all of the vanguard survived the battle. Chang also cited Kuomintang (KNP), the Chinese Nationalist faction during the Chinese Civil War, battleplans and communiques that indicated the force guarding the bridge had been withdrawn before the Communists arrived.[citation needed]

A number of historical works, even outside of China, do depict such a battle, though not of such heroic proportions. Harrison E. Salisbury's The Long March: The Untold Story and Charlotte Salisbury's Long March Diary mention a battle at Luding Bridge, but they relied on second-hand information; however, there is disagreement in other sources over the incident. Chinese journalist Sun Shuyun agreed that the official accounts were exaggerated. She interviewed a local blacksmith who had witnessed the event and said that "when [the troops opposing the Red Army] saw the soldiers coming, they panicked and fled — their officers had long abandoned them. There wasn't really much of a battle." Archives in Chengdu further supported this claim.[11]

In October 2005, The Age newspaper reported that it had been unable to find Chang's local witness.[12] In addition, The Sydney Morning Herald found an 85-year-old eyewitness, Li Guixiu, aged 15 at the time of the crossing, whose account disputed Chang's claims. According to Li, there was a battle: "The fighting started in the evening. There were many killed on the Red Army side. The KMT set fire to the bridge-house on the other side, to try to melt the chains, and one of the chains was cut. After it was taken, the Red Army took seven days and seven nights to cross."[13] In a speech given at Stanford University earlier in March 2005, former U.S. National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski mentioned a conversation that he once had with Deng Xiaoping. He recalled that Deng smiled and said: "Well, that's the way it's presented in our propaganda. We needed that to express the fighting spirit of our forces. In fact, it was a very easy military operation."[14]

Opium production

One of the allegations in the book against Mao was that he not just tolerated the production of opium in regions that the Communists controlled during the Chinese Civil War but also participated in the trade of it, in order to provide funding for his soldiers. According to Russian sources that the authors state they found, at the time the trade generated around $60 million a year for the Communists. This was stopped only due to overproduction driving down the price and Communist officials other than Mao deciding that the practice was immoral.[citation needed]

Campaigns against Mao's opponents

Mao is alleged to have exposed men under his command to unnecessary suffering just to eliminate his opponents. Zhang Guotao, a rival in the Politburo, was sent with his army in 1936 on a hopeless mission into the Gobi desert. When it inevitably failed Mao ordered that the survivors be executed. Chang and Halliday suggest that Mao used other underhanded means in eliminating opponents. Apart from general purges like the Hundred Flowers Campaign and other operations like the Cultural Revolution, he had Wang Ming (another Politburo rival) poisoned twice; Wang had to seek treatment in Russia.[citation needed]

Sino-Japanese War

Chang and Halliday write that in comparison to official history provided by the Chinese authorities that Communist forces waged a tough guerrilla war against the Imperial Japanese Army, in truth they rarely fought the Japanese. Mao was more interested in saving his forces for fighting against the Chinese Nationalists. On the few occasions that the Communists did fight the Japanese, Mao was very angry.[citation needed]

Communist sleeper agents

Notable members of the KMT were claimed to have been secretly working for the Chinese Communists. One such sleeper agent was Hu Zongnan, a senior National Revolutionary Army general. Hu's son objected to this description and his threat of legal action led Chang's publishers in Taiwan to abandon the release of the book there.[15]

Korean War

Rather than reluctantly entering the conflict as the Chinese government suggests, Mao is shown to have deliberately entered the Korean War, having promised Chinese troops to Kim Il Sung (then leader of North Korea) before the conflict started. Also, the book details Mao's desperation in needing economic and military aid promised by the Soviets, as the prime motivating factor in backing Kim Il-sung's invasion of South Korea. Halliday had previously conducted research into this conflict, publishing his book Korea: The Unknown War.[citation needed]

Number of deaths under Mao

The book opens with the sentence: "Mao Tse-tung, who for decades held absolute power over the lives of one-quarter of the world's population, was responsible for well over 70 million deaths in peacetime, more than any other twentieth century leader." He referred to the peasants as "two shoulders and a bum" because at any given time they could be killed but even more would be left alive.[9] Chang and Halliday say that he was willing for half of China to die to achieve military-nuclear superpowerdom. Estimates of the numbers of deaths during this period vary, though Chang and Halliday's estimate is one of the highest. In a review of the book, sinologist Stuart Schram wrote that "the exact figure ... has been estimated by well-informed writers at between 40 and 70 million."[16]

China scholars agree that the famine during the Great Leap Forward caused tens of millions of deaths but disagree on the exact number, which may be significant lower or higher but within that same range. Chang and Halliday write that this period accounts for roughly half of the 70 million total. An official estimate by Chinese Communist Party's high-ranking official Hu Yaobang in 1980 put the death toll at 20 million, whereas Mao's biographer Philip Short in his 2000 book Mao: A Life found 20 to 30 million to be the most credible number. Chang and Halliday's figure is 37.67 million, which historian Stuart Schram indicated that he believes "may well be the most accurate."[17] Yang Jisheng, a Communist party member and former reporter for Xinhua, puts the number of famine deaths at 36 million.[18] In his 2010 book Mao's Great Famine, Hong Kong-based historian Frank Dikötter, who has had access to newly opened local archives, places the death toll for the Great Leap Forward at 45 million, and describes it as "one of the most deadly mass killings of human history."[19] Dikötter's historical revisionist[20][21] work has been criticized by mainstream China scholars for his problematic use of sources,[22] including criticism by Short.[23]

In 2005,[24] political scientist Rudolph Rummel published updated figures on worldwide democide, stating that he believed Chang and Halliday's estimates to be mostly correct, and he had revised his figures for China under Mao accordingly.[25] While Rummel's general conclusions remain relevant,[26] his estimates of democide remain on the high-end of the spectrum and have been criticized by scholars as biased, inflated, or otherwise unreliable,[27] and his methodology has been questioned.[28]

Reception and impact

Mao: The Unknown Story became a bestseller, with United Kingdom sales alone reaching 60,000 in six months.[3] Academics and commentators wrote reviews ranging from great praise[4] to serious criticism.[5] The review aggregator Metacritic report the book received an average score of 64 out of 100, based on 24 reviews from major English-language media press.[29]

Positive

The book has received praise from a number of commentators and academic experts. Popular history author Simon Sebag Montefiore lauded the book in The Times, calling Chang and Halliday's work "a triumph" which "exposes its subject as probably the most disgusting of the bloody troika of 20th-century tyrant-messiahs, in terms of character, deeds — and number of victims. ... This is the first intimate, political biography of the greatest monster of them all — the Red Emperor of China."[30] In The New York Times, journalist Nicholas Kristof referred to the book as a "magisterial work"; Kristof said that it did a better job demonstrating that Mao was a "catastrophic ruler" than anything else written to date. In his words, "Mao's ruthlessness was ... brilliantly captured in this extraordinary book ... ."[31] Journalist Gwynne Dyer praised the book for documenting "Mao's crimes and failures in unrelenting, unprecedented detail", and stated he believed it would eventually have a similar impact in China as Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's The Gulag Archipelago did in the Soviet Union.[32]

Historian Max Hastings said the book is a "savage indictment, drawing on a host of sources including important Soviet ones, to blow away the miasma of deceit and ignorance which still shrouds Mao's life from many Western eyes." Its weakness is that "it attributes Mao's rise and long rule entirely to repression, and does not explain why so many of his own people remained for so long committed to his insane vision."[33] Michael Yahuda, Professor of International Relations at the London School of Economics, also expressed his support in The Guardian. He referred to it as a "magnificent book" and "a stupendous work" which cast "new and revealing light on nearly every episode in Mao's tumultuous life."[34]

Professor Richard Baum of the University of California, Los Angeles, said that "it has to be taken very seriously as the most thoroughly researched and richly documented piece of synthetic scholarship yet to appear on the rise of Mao and the CCP." Even if "not a sufficiently rich or nuanced interpretive scaffolding to support the full weight of the Chinese experience under Mao", Baum still believed that "this book will most likely change forever the way modern Chinese history is understood and taught."[35] While criticizing certain aspects of the book, Stuart Schram wrote in a review in The China Quarterly that Chang and Halliday's book was "a valuable contribution to our understanding of Mao and his place in history."[36]

Perry Link, then a Princeton University Professor of Chinese literature, praised the book in The Times Literary Supplement and emphasized the effect the book could have in the West, writing: "Part of Chang and Halliday's passion for exposing the 'unknown' Mao is clearly aimed at gullible Westerners. ... For decades many in the Western intellectual and political elites have assumed that Mao and his heirs symbolize the Chinese people and their culture, and that to show respect to the rulers is the same as showing respect to the subjects. Anyone who reads Jung Chang and Jon Halliday's book should be inoculated against this particular delusion. If the book sells even half as many copies as the 12 million of Wild Swans, it could deliver the coup de grace to an embarrassing and dangerous pattern of Western thinking."[9]

Mixed

Professor Andrew J. Nathan of Columbia University published an extensive evaluation of the book in the London Review of Books. While he was complimentary of the book in some respects, stating that it "shows special insight into the suffering of Mao's wives and children", and acknowledged that it might make real contributions to the field, Nathan's review was largely negative. He wrote that "many of their discoveries come from sources that cannot be checked, others are openly speculative or are based on circumstantial evidence, and some are untrue."[37] Professor Jonathan Spence of Yale University said in the New York Review of Books that the authors' single focus on Mao's vileness had undermined "much of the power their story might have had."[38]

Criticism

Chang and Halliday's book has been strongly criticized by various academics. In December 2005, The Observer stated that many knowledgeable academics of the field have questioned the factual accuracy of some of Chang and Halliday's claims, notably their selective use of evidence, questioning their stance in the matter, among other criticisms; the article also said that Chang and Halliday's critics did not deny Mao's monstrous actions.[3]

David S. G. Goodman, Professor of Chinese Politics at the University of Sydney, wrote in The Pacific Review that the book, like other examples of historical revisionism, implied that there had been "a conspiracy of academics and scholars who have chosen not to reveal the truth." Goodman stated that as popular history the book's style was "extremely polemic" and he was highly critical of Chang and Halliday's methodology and use of sources as well as specific conclusions.[39] Professor Thomas Bernstein of Columbia University referred to the book as "a major disaster for the contemporary China field" because the "scholarship is put at the service of thoroughly destroying Mao's reputation. The result is an equally stupendous number of quotations out of context, distortion of facts and omission of much of what makes Mao a complex, contradictory, and multi-sided leader."[13]

The China Journal invited a group of specialists to give assessments of the book in the area of their expertise. Professors Gregor Benton and Steve Tsang wrote that Chang and Halliday "misread sources, use them selectively, use them out of context, or otherwise trim or bend them to cast Mao in an unrelentingly bad light."[40] Timothy Cheek (University of British Columbia) said that the book is "not a history in the accepted sense of a reasoned historical analysis", and rather it "reads like an entertaining Chinese version of a TV soap opera."[41] University of California at Berkeley political scientist Lowell Dittmer added that "surely the depiction is overdrawn" but what emerges is a story of "absolute power", leading first to personal corruption in the form of sexual indulgence and paranoia, and secondly to policy corruption, consisting of the power to realize "fantastic charismatic visions and ignore negative feedback ... ."[42] Geremie Barmé (Australian National University) stated that while "anyone familiar with the lived realities of the Mao years can sympathize with the authors' outrage", one must ask whether "a vengeful spirit serves either author or reader well, especially in the creation of a mass market work that would claim authority and dominance in the study of Mao Zedong and his history."[43]

The 2009 anthology Was Mao Really a Monster: The Academic Response to Chang and Halliday's "Mao: The Unknown Story", edited by Gregor Benton and Lin Chun, brings together fourteen mostly critical previously published academic responses, including the reviews from China Journal. Benton and Lin write in their introduction that "unlike the worldwide commercial media, ... most professional commentary has been disapproving." They challenge the assertion that Mao was responsible for 70 million deaths, since the number's origin is vague and substantiation shaky. They include an extensive list of further reviews.[44] Gao Mobo, of the University of Adelaide, wrote that the book was "intellectually scandalous", saying that it "misinterprets evidence, ignores the existing literature, and makes sensationalist claims without proper evidence."[45]

Writing for the Marxist New Left Review, British historian Tariq Ali criticized the book for its focus "on Mao's conspicuous imperfections (political and sexual), exaggerating them to fantastical heights, and advancing moral criteria for political leaders that they would never apply to a Roosevelt or a Kennedy"; Ali accused the book of including unsourced and unproven claims, including archival material from Mao's political opponents in Taiwan and the Soviet Union whose reliability are disputed, as well as celebrity interviewees, such as Lech Wałęsa, whose knowledge of Mao and China are limited. Ali compared the book's sensationalist passages and denunciations of Mao to Mao's own political slogans during the Cultural Revolution.[46]

Historian Rebecca Karl summarizes: "According to many reviewers of [Mao: The Unknown Story], the story told therein is unknown because Chang and Halliday substantially fabricated it or exaggerated it into existence."[47]

Response to criticism

In December 2005, an article by The Observer newspaper on the book contained a brief statement from Chang and Halliday in regards to the general criticism.[3] The authors said that "the academics' views on Mao and Chinese history cited represent received wisdom of which we were well aware while writing our biography of Mao. We came to our own conclusions and interpretations of events through a decade's research." They responded to sinologist Andrew J. Nathan's review[37] in a letter to the London Review of Books.[48]

Nathan replied to the authors' response, below their letter in the same issue of that journal, his letter including the following points: "Most of Jung Chang and Jon Halliday's complaints fall into two overlapping categories: I did not check enough sources; I misinterpreted what they or their sources said. ... Chang and Halliday's method of citation makes it necessary for the reader to check multiple sources in order to track down the basis for any single assertion. There were many passages in their book which I had doubts about that I could not check because the sources were anonymous, unpublished, or simply too hard to get. It's true that I did not visit the Wang Ming papers in Russia or telephone the Japanese Communist Party. Is Chang and Halliday's invitation to do this a fair substitute for citations to the documents they used – author, title, date, and where seen? I limited my published criticisms to those for which I was able to get hold of what appeared to be all the sources."[48]

The London Review of Books published the biographer Donald A. Gillies' letter a few weeks later, responding to Nathan's review. Gillies cited Chang's and Halliday's unsourced allegation that apparently libels Archibald Clark Kerr, the subject of his biography. The letter states: "If this is symptomatic of their overall approach, then I am not surprised that they should find themselves under attack from Andrew Nathan. The issue is not Mao's character and deeds but the ethics of biography."[49]

About some of the critics of the book, sociologist Paul Hollander said: "While some of the critiques of Chang and Halliday were reasonable—especially of the over-emphasis on personality at the expense of other factors and the neglect of competing scholarly sources—the vehemence of the critics' indignation calls into question their scholarly impartiality. ... It cannot be ruled out that the great commercial success of such a supposedly flawed book also interfered with its dispassionate evaluation by some of these authors. ... Most problematic has been the argument repeatedly made ... that Mao's defects, or crimes, must be weighed against his accomplishments. ... Can they balance the loss of millions of lives as a result of profoundly wrongheaded policies (such as the Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution), regardless of their supposed objectives?"[50]

Publication

English

In July 2005, the book was on The Sunday Times bestseller list at No. 2.

Chinese

  • Publisher: Open Magazine Publishing (Hong Kong)

See also

References

  1. ^ Jung, Chang (2005). Mao: The Unknown Story. New York: Anchor Books. ISBN 0679746323.
  2. ^ a b Hayford, Charles W. (Fall 2006). "Popular History and the Scholars—Mao: The Unknown Story" (PDF). Education About Asia. Association for Asian Studies. 11 (2): 58–60. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d Fenby, Jonathan (4 December 2005). "Storm rages over bestselling book on monster Mao". The Observer. Guardian Media Group. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  4. ^ a b Walsh, John (10 June 2005). . Asian Review of Books. Archived from the original on 1 November 2005. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  5. ^ a b Pomfret, John (11 December 2005). "Chairman Monster". The Washington Post. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  6. ^ Haas, Brent (2006). "Mao: The Unknown Story". UCSD Modern Chinese History Research Site. University of California, San Diego. Retrieved 20 November 2021. In this reviewer's opinion, and those of China specialists including Perry Link ('An Abnormal Mind,' Times Literary Supplement, 8/14/2005), Jonathan Spence ('Portrait of a Monster,' New York Review of Books, 11/3/2005), Andrew Nathan ('Jade and Plastic,' London Review of Books, 11/17/2005), Arthur Waldron, and Jeffrey Wasserstrom ('Mao as Monster,' Chicago Tribune, 11/6/2005), this is a much-needed corrective. But, excluding Waldron's laudatory review ('Mao Lives,' Commentary, 10/2005), scholarly reviewers found many problems with their research and citation methodology and blatant political axe to grind. Specifically, unhelpful citations, manipulated interpretation of sources to suit their argumentation, and blatantly-unsourced assertions mar a seminal study of Mao based on a decade of research and geared towards an important political re-evaluation of a horrible tyrant.
  7. ^ Benton, Gregor; Chun, Lin, eds. (2010). Was Mao Really a Monster?: The Academic Response to Chang and Halliday's "Mao: The Unknown Story" (1st ed.). Routledge. ISBN 9780415493307.
  8. ^ Hayford, Charles W. (June 2011). "Was Mao Really a Monster?: The Academic Response to Chang and "Halliday's Mao: The Unknown Story"". Pacific Affairs. 82 (2): 32–33. doi:10.14288/1.0045080. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  9. ^ Haas, Brent (2006). "Mao: The Unknown Story". UCSD Modern Chinese History Research Site. University of California, San Diego. Retrieved 20 November 2021. If Chang and Halliday's historical research is true (although for the above reasons many assertions defy scholarly examination), this book will sound the death-knell of Mao's legacy. Jonathan Spence noted 22 separate instances of historical revisionism that could challenge much of our understanding of Mao and the Chinese Revolution (Spence, 24). Notable but inexhaustive examples include Mao's lack of caring for the plight of Chinese peasants; Stalin and the Comintern's crucial role in founding and funding the CCP and Mao's rise to power; Mao's destruction of the Jinggang revolutionary base for political ends; the Red Army's legendary Long March as a product of Chiang Kai-shek's willingness to let them escape so his son would be returned from captivity in the Soviet Union; the utter fabrication of the most famous tale of the Long March, the battle at the Luding Bridge; Mao's agreement to partition China with Stalin – the list goes on and on.
  10. ^ Sun, Shuyun (2006). The Long March. HarperCollins. pp. 161–165. ISBN 000719479X.
  11. ^ "Throwing the book at Mao". The Age. 8 October 2005. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  12. ^ a b McDonald, Hamish (8 October 2005). "A Swan's Little Book of Ire". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  13. ^ Brzezinski, Zbigniew (9 March 2005). (PDF) (Speech). Freeman Spogli Institute. Stanford University. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 September 2006. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  14. ^ "Zhāng róng: Máofà dòng tǔgǎi shì yào nóngmín guāiguāi tīnghuà" 張戎:毛髮動土改是要農民乖乖聽話 [Jung Chang: Mao launched land reform to make the peasants obedient]. Renminbao (in Chinese). 19 October 2006. from the original on 6 May 2021. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  15. ^ Schram, Stuart (March 2007). "Mao: The Unknown Story". The China Quarterly. Cambridge University Press (189): 205–208. doi:10.1017/s030574100600107x. JSTOR 20192754. S2CID 154814055. Quoted at p. 205.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  16. ^ Schram, Stuart (March 2007). "Mao: The Unknown Story". The China Quarterly. Cambridge University Press (189): 205–208. doi:10.1017/s030574100600107x. JSTOR 20192754. S2CID 154814055. At p. 207.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  17. ^ O'Neill, Mark (6 July 2008). "A hunger for the truth". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  18. ^ Becker, Jasper (25 September 2010). "Systematic genocide". The Spectator. from the original on 11 April 2012. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  19. ^ Lodwick, Kathleen L. (Spring 2005). "Narcotic Culture: A History of Drugs in China (review)". China Review International. 12 (1): 74–76. doi:10.1353/cri.2005.0147. ISSN 1527-9367.
  20. ^ Mishra, Pankaj (20 December 2010). "Staying Power: Mao and the Maoists". The New Yorker. Retrieved 21 November 2021.
  21. ^ Dikötter, Frank; Mishra, Pankaj (15 November 2011). "Interview: Frank Dikötter, Author of 'Mao's Great Famine' [Updated]". Asia Society. Asia Society Policy Institute. Retrieved 21 November 2021.
  22. ^ Short, Philip (2016). Mao: The Man Who Made China. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 9781786730152. It may be argued that these are quibbles; factual errors occur in the best books. However, Dikötter's errors are strangely consistent. They all serve to strengthen his case against Mao and his fellow leaders.
  23. ^ Rummel, Rudolph (30 November 2005). "Getting My Reestimate Of Mao's Democide Out". Democratic Peace. from the original on 23 August 2021. Retrieved 9 April 2007.
  24. ^ Charny, Israel W. (2016). The Genocide Contagion: How We Commit and Confront Holocaust and Genocide. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 203. ISBN 9781442254367.
  25. ^ Berger, Alan L. (2014). Post-Holocaust Jewish–Christian Dialogue: After the Flood, before the Rainbow. Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books. p. 98. ISBN 9780739199015. Rummel has been criticized for exaggerating the losses. Even if the criticisms were valid, a figure lower by 10 or 20 or even 30 percent would make absolutely no difference to the general conclusions that Rummel draws.
  26. ^ Karlsson, Klas-Göran; Schoenhals, Michael, eds. (2008). Crimes Against Humanity under Communist Regimes – Research Review (PDF). Stockholm, Sweden: Forum for Living History. p. 79. ISBN 9789197748728. Retrieved 21 November 2021. It could, quite rightly, be claimed that the opinions that Rummel presents here (they are hardly an example of a serious and empirically-based writing of history) do not deserve to be mentioned in a research review, but they are still perhaps worth bringing up on the basis of the interest in him in the blogosphere.
  27. ^ Harff, Barbara (2017). "The Comparative Analysis of Mass Atrocities and Genocide" (PDF). In Gleditish, N. P. (ed.). R.J. Rummel: An Assessment of His Many Contributions. SpringerBriefs on Pioneers in Science and Practice. Vol. 37. New York City, New York: Springer. pp. 111–129. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-54463-2_12. ISBN 9783319544632.
  28. ^ . Metacritic. Archived from the original on 14 July 2011. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  29. ^ Montefiore, Simon Sebag (29 May 2005). "History: Mao by Jung Chang and Jon Halliday". The Sunday Times. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  30. ^ Kristof, Nicholas (23 October 2005). "'Mao': The Real Mao". The New York Times. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  31. ^ Dyer, Gwynne (13 June 2005). "Mao: Ten Parts Bad, No Parts Good". Gwynne Dyer. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  32. ^ Hastings, Max (5 June 2005). "The long march to mass murder". The Telegraph. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  33. ^ Yahuda, Michael (4 June 2005). "Bad element". The Guardian. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  34. ^ Beach, Sophie (September 2005). . China Digital Times. Archived from the original on 6 April 2007. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  35. ^ Schram, Stuart (16 March 2007). "Mao: The Unknown Story". The China Quarterly. Cambridge University Press (189): 205–208. doi:10.1017/S030574100600107X. JSTOR 20192754. S2CID 154814055. Quote at p. 208.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  36. ^ a b Nathan, Andrew J. (17 November 2005). "Jade and Plastic". London Review of Books. Vol. 27, no. 22. from the original on 11 May 2008. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  37. ^ Spence, Jonathan (3 November 2005). "Portrait of a Monster". The New York Review of Books. from the original on 27 March 2020. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  38. ^ Goodman, David S. G. (September 2006). "Mao and The Da Vinci Code: conspiracy, narrative and history". The Pacific Review. Routledge. 19 (3): 39–384. doi:10.1080/09512740600875135. S2CID 144521610. Relevant pages at 361, 362, 363, 375, 376, 380, 381.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  39. ^ Benton, Gregor; Tsang, Steven (January 2006). "The Portrayal of Opportunism, Betrayal, and Manipulation in Mao's Rise to Power". The China Journal. University of Chicago Press (55): 95–109. doi:10.2307/20066121. JSTOR 20066121. S2CID 144181404. Quote at p. 96.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  40. ^ Cheek, Timothy (January 2006). "The New Number One Counter-Revolutionary Inside the Party: Academic Biography as Mass Criticism". The China Journal. University of Chicago Press (55): 109–118. doi:10.2307/20066122. JSTOR 20066122. S2CID 145453303. Quotes at pp. 110.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  41. ^ Dittmer, Lowell (January 2006). "Pitfalls of Charisma". The China Journal. University of Chicago Press (55): 119–128. doi:10.2307/20066123. JSTOR 20066123. S2CID 143416569.
  42. ^ Barmé, Geremie (January 2006). "I'm So Ronree". The China Journal. University of Chicago Press (55): 128–139. doi:10.2307/20066124. JSTOR 20066124. S2CID 144957272.
  43. ^ Benton, Gregor; Chun, Lin, eds. (2010). Was Mao Really a Monster?: The Academic Response to Chang and Halliday's "Mao: The Unknown Story" (1st ed.). Routledge. pp. 9–11. ISBN 9780415493307.
  44. ^ Gao, Mobo (2008). The Battle for China's Past: Mao and the Cultural Revolution. Pluto Press. p. 11. ISBN 9780745327808.
  45. ^ Ali, Tariq (November 2010). "On Mao's Contradictions". New Left Review. No. 66. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  46. ^ Karl, Rebecca E. (2010). Mao Zedong and China in the twentieth-century world : a concise history. Durham [NC]: Duke University Press. pp. ix. ISBN 978-0-8223-4780-4. OCLC 503828045.
  47. ^ a b Chang, Jung; Halliday, Jon (4 December 2005). "Letters: A Question of Sources". London Review of Books. Vol. 27, no. 24. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  48. ^ Gillies, Donald A. (5 January 2006). "Letters: A Question of Sources". London Review of Books. Vol. 28, no. 1. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  49. ^ Hollander, Paul (2016). From Benito Mussolini to Hugo Chavez: Intellectuals and a Century of Political Hero Worship. Cambridge University Press. p. 171. ISBN 9781108107617.

Further reading

  • Leese, Daniel (September 2007). "The Pitfalls of Demonisation – Mao: The Unknown Story and its Medial Repercussions". Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions. 8 (3–4): 677–682. doi:10.1080/14690760701571320. ISSN 1469-0764. S2CID 144337070.

External links

  • "Mao: The Unknown Story", extract of the book from the publishers
  • Some editions at Google Books
  • "New Bio Offers Sinister View of Chairman Mao", NPR (contains audio interview with Chang and Halliday)
  • "Homo sanguinarius", The Economist, 26 May 2005
  • "This book will shake the world" by Lisa Allardice, The Guardian, 26 May 2005
  • by Frank McLynn, The Independent on Sunday, 5 June 2005
  • "The long march to evil" by Roy Hattersley, The Observer, 5 June 2005
  • by Richard McGregor, The Financial Times, 17 June 2005
  • China experts attack biography's 'misleading' sources by Jonathan Fenby, The Observer, 4 December 2005
  • by Alfred Chan, Pacific Affairs (2006, vol. 79, No. 2)
  • "China's Monster, Second to None" by Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times, 21 October 2005
  • by Adi Ignatius, Time, 23 October 2005
  • Presentation at the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at Harvard University by Chang and Halliday on Mao: The Unknown Story, 24 October 2005, C-SPAN

unknown, story, 2005, biography, chinese, communist, leader, zedong, 1893, 1976, that, written, husband, wife, team, writer, jung, chang, historian, halliday, detail, early, life, introduction, chinese, communist, party, political, career, book, summarizes, tr. Mao The Unknown Story is a 2005 biography of the Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong 1893 1976 that was written by the husband and wife team of the writer Jung Chang and the historian Jon Halliday who detail Mao s early life his introduction to the Chinese Communist Party and his political career The book summarizes Mao s transition from a rebel against the autocratic Kuomintang government to the totalitarian dictator over the People s Republic of China Chang and Halliday heavily cover Mao s role in the planning and the execution of the Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution In that capacity they note that Mao is responsible for an unprecedented death toll during peacetime that ranged from 40 to 70 million people 1 Mao The Unknown StoryFirst edition coverAuthorsJung ChangJon HallidayCountryUnited KingdomLanguageEnglishSubjectMao ZedongPublisherJonathan CapePublication date2 June 2005Media typePrint hardcover Pages814ISBN9780224071260In conducting their research for the book over the course of a decade the authors interviewed hundreds of people who were close to Mao at some point in his life used recently published memoirs from Chinese political figures and explored newly opened archives in China and Russia Chang had herself lived through the turmoil of the Cultural Revolution which she described in her earlier book Wild Swans 1991 2 The book quickly became a best seller in Europe and North America 3 It received overwhelming praise from reviews in national newspapers and drew praise from some academics 4 but mostly critical or mixed by others 5 Reviews from many China specialists were critical and cite inaccuracies and selectivity in the use of sources and the polemical portrayal of Mao 6 7 8 Contents 1 Synopsis 1 1 Long March 1 2 Opium production 1 3 Campaigns against Mao s opponents 1 4 Sino Japanese War 1 5 Communist sleeper agents 1 6 Korean War 1 7 Number of deaths under Mao 2 Reception and impact 2 1 Positive 2 2 Mixed 2 3 Criticism 2 3 1 Response to criticism 3 Publication 3 1 English 3 2 Chinese 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksSynopsis EditChang and Halliday do not accept the idealistic explanations for Mao s rise to power or common claims for his rule They portray him as a tyrant who manipulated everyone and everything he could in pursuit of personal power 9 They state that from his earliest years he was motivated by a lust for power and that Mao had many political opponents arrested and murdered regardless of their relationship with him During the 1920s and 1930s they write that Mao could not have gained control of the party without Stalin s patronage nor were Mao s decisions during the Long March as heroic and ingenious as Edgar Snow s Red Star Over China claimed and thereby entered the mythology of the revolution 2 Chiang Kai shek deliberately did not pursue and capture the Red Army 10 Chang wrote this biography to debunk the myth of Mao as an emblem of Chinese government that survives into the 21st century 9 Areas under Communist control during the Second United Front and Chinese Civil War such as the Jiangxi and Yan an soviets were ruled through terror and financed by opium They say that Mao sacrificed thousands of troops for the purpose of getting rid of party rivals such as Chang Kuo tao and he did not take the initiative in fighting the Japanese invaders Despite being born into a wealthy peasant kulak family Mao had little concern for the welfare of the Chinese peasantry when he came to power in 1949 Mao s determination to use agricultural surplus to subsidize industry and intimidation of dissent led to murderous famines resulting from the Great Leap Forward exacerbated by allowing the export of grain to continue even when it became clear that China did not have sufficient grain to feed its population citation needed Long March Edit Chang and Halliday said that the Long March was not the courageous effort portrayed by the Chinese Communist Party and that Mao s role in leading it was exaggerated Chang refers to the march as a myth that has been tweaked and exaggerated throughout the decades by the Chinese government They write that today the Long March s validity is questionable because it has diverged so far from reality Officially portrayed as an inspiring commander the authors write that he was nearly left behind by the March and only commanded a fairly small force He was apparently disliked by almost all of the people on the March and his tactics and strategy were flawed They also write that Chiang Kai shek allowed the Communists to proceed without significant hindrance They provided the communists with maps and allowed them to escape the clutches of his army because his son was being held hostage in Moscow and he feared he would be killed if the Communists failed citation needed Mao is also portrayed along with the Communist elite as a privileged person who was usually carried around in litters and protected from the suffering of his subordinates rather than sharing their hardship Despite the high level of casualties amongst ordinary soldiers supposedly no high ranking leaders died on the journey regardless of how ill or badly wounded they were The book says that contrary to revolutionary mythology there was no battle at Luding Bridge and that tales of a heroic crossing against the odds was merely propaganda Chang found a witness Li Xiu zhen who told her that she saw no fighting and that the bridge was not on fire In addition she said that despite claims by the Communists that the fighting was fierce all of the vanguard survived the battle Chang also cited Kuomintang KNP the Chinese Nationalist faction during the Chinese Civil War battleplans and communiques that indicated the force guarding the bridge had been withdrawn before the Communists arrived citation needed A number of historical works even outside of China do depict such a battle though not of such heroic proportions Harrison E Salisbury s The Long March The Untold Story and Charlotte Salisbury s Long March Diary mention a battle at Luding Bridge but they relied on second hand information however there is disagreement in other sources over the incident Chinese journalist Sun Shuyun agreed that the official accounts were exaggerated She interviewed a local blacksmith who had witnessed the event and said that when the troops opposing the Red Army saw the soldiers coming they panicked and fled their officers had long abandoned them There wasn t really much of a battle Archives in Chengdu further supported this claim 11 In October 2005 The Age newspaper reported that it had been unable to find Chang s local witness 12 In addition The Sydney Morning Herald found an 85 year old eyewitness Li Guixiu aged 15 at the time of the crossing whose account disputed Chang s claims According to Li there was a battle The fighting started in the evening There were many killed on the Red Army side The KMT set fire to the bridge house on the other side to try to melt the chains and one of the chains was cut After it was taken the Red Army took seven days and seven nights to cross 13 In a speech given at Stanford University earlier in March 2005 former U S National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski mentioned a conversation that he once had with Deng Xiaoping He recalled that Deng smiled and said Well that s the way it s presented in our propaganda We needed that to express the fighting spirit of our forces In fact it was a very easy military operation 14 Opium production Edit One of the allegations in the book against Mao was that he not just tolerated the production of opium in regions that the Communists controlled during the Chinese Civil War but also participated in the trade of it in order to provide funding for his soldiers According to Russian sources that the authors state they found at the time the trade generated around 60 million a year for the Communists This was stopped only due to overproduction driving down the price and Communist officials other than Mao deciding that the practice was immoral citation needed Campaigns against Mao s opponents Edit Mao is alleged to have exposed men under his command to unnecessary suffering just to eliminate his opponents Zhang Guotao a rival in the Politburo was sent with his army in 1936 on a hopeless mission into the Gobi desert When it inevitably failed Mao ordered that the survivors be executed Chang and Halliday suggest that Mao used other underhanded means in eliminating opponents Apart from general purges like the Hundred Flowers Campaign and other operations like the Cultural Revolution he had Wang Ming another Politburo rival poisoned twice Wang had to seek treatment in Russia citation needed Sino Japanese War Edit Chang and Halliday write that in comparison to official history provided by the Chinese authorities that Communist forces waged a tough guerrilla war against the Imperial Japanese Army in truth they rarely fought the Japanese Mao was more interested in saving his forces for fighting against the Chinese Nationalists On the few occasions that the Communists did fight the Japanese Mao was very angry citation needed Communist sleeper agents Edit Notable members of the KMT were claimed to have been secretly working for the Chinese Communists One such sleeper agent was Hu Zongnan a senior National Revolutionary Army general Hu s son objected to this description and his threat of legal action led Chang s publishers in Taiwan to abandon the release of the book there 15 Korean War Edit Rather than reluctantly entering the conflict as the Chinese government suggests Mao is shown to have deliberately entered the Korean War having promised Chinese troops to Kim Il Sung then leader of North Korea before the conflict started Also the book details Mao s desperation in needing economic and military aid promised by the Soviets as the prime motivating factor in backing Kim Il sung s invasion of South Korea Halliday had previously conducted research into this conflict publishing his book Korea The Unknown War citation needed Number of deaths under Mao Edit The book opens with the sentence Mao Tse tung who for decades held absolute power over the lives of one quarter of the world s population was responsible for well over 70 million deaths in peacetime more than any other twentieth century leader He referred to the peasants as two shoulders and a bum because at any given time they could be killed but even more would be left alive 9 Chang and Halliday say that he was willing for half of China to die to achieve military nuclear superpowerdom Estimates of the numbers of deaths during this period vary though Chang and Halliday s estimate is one of the highest In a review of the book sinologist Stuart Schram wrote that the exact figure has been estimated by well informed writers at between 40 and 70 million 16 China scholars agree that the famine during the Great Leap Forward caused tens of millions of deaths but disagree on the exact number which may be significant lower or higher but within that same range Chang and Halliday write that this period accounts for roughly half of the 70 million total An official estimate by Chinese Communist Party s high ranking official Hu Yaobang in 1980 put the death toll at 20 million whereas Mao s biographer Philip Short in his 2000 book Mao A Life found 20 to 30 million to be the most credible number Chang and Halliday s figure is 37 67 million which historian Stuart Schram indicated that he believes may well be the most accurate 17 Yang Jisheng a Communist party member and former reporter for Xinhua puts the number of famine deaths at 36 million 18 In his 2010 book Mao s Great Famine Hong Kong based historian Frank Dikotter who has had access to newly opened local archives places the death toll for the Great Leap Forward at 45 million and describes it as one of the most deadly mass killings of human history 19 Dikotter s historical revisionist 20 21 work has been criticized by mainstream China scholars for his problematic use of sources 22 including criticism by Short 23 In 2005 24 political scientist Rudolph Rummel published updated figures on worldwide democide stating that he believed Chang and Halliday s estimates to be mostly correct and he had revised his figures for China under Mao accordingly 25 While Rummel s general conclusions remain relevant 26 his estimates of democide remain on the high end of the spectrum and have been criticized by scholars as biased inflated or otherwise unreliable 27 and his methodology has been questioned 28 Reception and impact EditMao The Unknown Story became a bestseller with United Kingdom sales alone reaching 60 000 in six months 3 Academics and commentators wrote reviews ranging from great praise 4 to serious criticism 5 The review aggregator Metacritic report the book received an average score of 64 out of 100 based on 24 reviews from major English language media press 29 Positive Edit The book has received praise from a number of commentators and academic experts Popular history author Simon Sebag Montefiore lauded the book in The Times calling Chang and Halliday s work a triumph which exposes its subject as probably the most disgusting of the bloody troika of 20th century tyrant messiahs in terms of character deeds and number of victims This is the first intimate political biography of the greatest monster of them all the Red Emperor of China 30 In The New York Times journalist Nicholas Kristof referred to the book as a magisterial work Kristof said that it did a better job demonstrating that Mao was a catastrophic ruler than anything else written to date In his words Mao s ruthlessness was brilliantly captured in this extraordinary book 31 Journalist Gwynne Dyer praised the book for documenting Mao s crimes and failures in unrelenting unprecedented detail and stated he believed it would eventually have a similar impact in China as Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn s The Gulag Archipelago did in the Soviet Union 32 Historian Max Hastings said the book is a savage indictment drawing on a host of sources including important Soviet ones to blow away the miasma of deceit and ignorance which still shrouds Mao s life from many Western eyes Its weakness is that it attributes Mao s rise and long rule entirely to repression and does not explain why so many of his own people remained for so long committed to his insane vision 33 Michael Yahuda Professor of International Relations at the London School of Economics also expressed his support in The Guardian He referred to it as a magnificent book and a stupendous work which cast new and revealing light on nearly every episode in Mao s tumultuous life 34 Professor Richard Baum of the University of California Los Angeles said that it has to be taken very seriously as the most thoroughly researched and richly documented piece of synthetic scholarship yet to appear on the rise of Mao and the CCP Even if not a sufficiently rich or nuanced interpretive scaffolding to support the full weight of the Chinese experience under Mao Baum still believed that this book will most likely change forever the way modern Chinese history is understood and taught 35 While criticizing certain aspects of the book Stuart Schram wrote in a review in The China Quarterly that Chang and Halliday s book was a valuable contribution to our understanding of Mao and his place in history 36 Perry Link then a Princeton University Professor of Chinese literature praised the book in The Times Literary Supplement and emphasized the effect the book could have in the West writing Part of Chang and Halliday s passion for exposing the unknown Mao is clearly aimed at gullible Westerners For decades many in the Western intellectual and political elites have assumed that Mao and his heirs symbolize the Chinese people and their culture and that to show respect to the rulers is the same as showing respect to the subjects Anyone who reads Jung Chang and Jon Halliday s book should be inoculated against this particular delusion If the book sells even half as many copies as the 12 million of Wild Swans it could deliver the coup de grace to an embarrassing and dangerous pattern of Western thinking 9 Mixed Edit Professor Andrew J Nathan of Columbia University published an extensive evaluation of the book in the London Review of Books While he was complimentary of the book in some respects stating that it shows special insight into the suffering of Mao s wives and children and acknowledged that it might make real contributions to the field Nathan s review was largely negative He wrote that many of their discoveries come from sources that cannot be checked others are openly speculative or are based on circumstantial evidence and some are untrue 37 Professor Jonathan Spence of Yale University said in the New York Review of Books that the authors single focus on Mao s vileness had undermined much of the power their story might have had 38 Criticism Edit Chang and Halliday s book has been strongly criticized by various academics In December 2005 The Observer stated that many knowledgeable academics of the field have questioned the factual accuracy of some of Chang and Halliday s claims notably their selective use of evidence questioning their stance in the matter among other criticisms the article also said that Chang and Halliday s critics did not deny Mao s monstrous actions 3 David S G Goodman Professor of Chinese Politics at the University of Sydney wrote in The Pacific Review that the book like other examples of historical revisionism implied that there had been a conspiracy of academics and scholars who have chosen not to reveal the truth Goodman stated that as popular history the book s style was extremely polemic and he was highly critical of Chang and Halliday s methodology and use of sources as well as specific conclusions 39 Professor Thomas Bernstein of Columbia University referred to the book as a major disaster for the contemporary China field because the scholarship is put at the service of thoroughly destroying Mao s reputation The result is an equally stupendous number of quotations out of context distortion of facts and omission of much of what makes Mao a complex contradictory and multi sided leader 13 The China Journal invited a group of specialists to give assessments of the book in the area of their expertise Professors Gregor Benton and Steve Tsang wrote that Chang and Halliday misread sources use them selectively use them out of context or otherwise trim or bend them to cast Mao in an unrelentingly bad light 40 Timothy Cheek University of British Columbia said that the book is not a history in the accepted sense of a reasoned historical analysis and rather it reads like an entertaining Chinese version of a TV soap opera 41 University of California at Berkeley political scientist Lowell Dittmer added that surely the depiction is overdrawn but what emerges is a story of absolute power leading first to personal corruption in the form of sexual indulgence and paranoia and secondly to policy corruption consisting of the power to realize fantastic charismatic visions and ignore negative feedback 42 Geremie Barme Australian National University stated that while anyone familiar with the lived realities of the Mao years can sympathize with the authors outrage one must ask whether a vengeful spirit serves either author or reader well especially in the creation of a mass market work that would claim authority and dominance in the study of Mao Zedong and his history 43 The 2009 anthology Was Mao Really a Monster The Academic Response to Chang and Halliday s Mao The Unknown Story edited by Gregor Benton and Lin Chun brings together fourteen mostly critical previously published academic responses including the reviews from China Journal Benton and Lin write in their introduction that unlike the worldwide commercial media most professional commentary has been disapproving They challenge the assertion that Mao was responsible for 70 million deaths since the number s origin is vague and substantiation shaky They include an extensive list of further reviews 44 Gao Mobo of the University of Adelaide wrote that the book was intellectually scandalous saying that it misinterprets evidence ignores the existing literature and makes sensationalist claims without proper evidence 45 Writing for the Marxist New Left Review British historian Tariq Ali criticized the book for its focus on Mao s conspicuous imperfections political and sexual exaggerating them to fantastical heights and advancing moral criteria for political leaders that they would never apply to a Roosevelt or a Kennedy Ali accused the book of including unsourced and unproven claims including archival material from Mao s political opponents in Taiwan and the Soviet Union whose reliability are disputed as well as celebrity interviewees such as Lech Walesa whose knowledge of Mao and China are limited Ali compared the book s sensationalist passages and denunciations of Mao to Mao s own political slogans during the Cultural Revolution 46 Historian Rebecca Karl summarizes According to many reviewers of Mao The Unknown Story the story told therein is unknown because Chang and Halliday substantially fabricated it or exaggerated it into existence 47 Response to criticism Edit In December 2005 an article by The Observer newspaper on the book contained a brief statement from Chang and Halliday in regards to the general criticism 3 The authors said that the academics views on Mao and Chinese history cited represent received wisdom of which we were well aware while writing our biography of Mao We came to our own conclusions and interpretations of events through a decade s research They responded to sinologist Andrew J Nathan s review 37 in a letter to the London Review of Books 48 Nathan replied to the authors response below their letter in the same issue of that journal his letter including the following points Most of Jung Chang and Jon Halliday s complaints fall into two overlapping categories I did not check enough sources I misinterpreted what they or their sources said Chang and Halliday s method of citation makes it necessary for the reader to check multiple sources in order to track down the basis for any single assertion There were many passages in their book which I had doubts about that I could not check because the sources were anonymous unpublished or simply too hard to get It s true that I did not visit the Wang Ming papers in Russia or telephone the Japanese Communist Party Is Chang and Halliday s invitation to do this a fair substitute for citations to the documents they used author title date and where seen I limited my published criticisms to those for which I was able to get hold of what appeared to be all the sources 48 The London Review of Books published the biographer Donald A Gillies letter a few weeks later responding to Nathan s review Gillies cited Chang s and Halliday s unsourced allegation that apparently libels Archibald Clark Kerr the subject of his biography The letter states If this is symptomatic of their overall approach then I am not surprised that they should find themselves under attack from Andrew Nathan The issue is not Mao s character and deeds but the ethics of biography 49 About some of the critics of the book sociologist Paul Hollander said While some of the critiques of Chang and Halliday were reasonable especially of the over emphasis on personality at the expense of other factors and the neglect of competing scholarly sources the vehemence of the critics indignation calls into question their scholarly impartiality It cannot be ruled out that the great commercial success of such a supposedly flawed book also interfered with its dispassionate evaluation by some of these authors Most problematic has been the argument repeatedly made that Mao s defects or crimes must be weighed against his accomplishments Can they balance the loss of millions of lives as a result of profoundly wrongheaded policies such as the Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution regardless of their supposed objectives 50 Publication EditEnglish Edit Publisher Random House New York City Publication date 2 June 2005 ISBN 0224071262 Publisher Alfred A Knopf New York City Publication date 18 October 2005 ISBN 0679422714In July 2005 the book was on The Sunday Times bestseller list at No 2 Chinese Edit Publisher Open Magazine Publishing Hong Kong Publication date 6 September 2006 ISBN 9627934194See also EditThe Private Life of Chairman Mao Red Star Over ChinaReferences Edit Jung Chang 2005 Mao The Unknown Story New York Anchor Books ISBN 0679746323 a b Hayford Charles W Fall 2006 Popular History and the Scholars Mao The Unknown Story PDF Education About Asia Association for Asian Studies 11 2 58 60 Retrieved 20 November 2021 a b c d Fenby Jonathan 4 December 2005 Storm rages over bestselling book on monster Mao The Observer Guardian Media Group Retrieved 20 November 2021 a b Walsh John 10 June 2005 Mao The Unknown Story by Jung Chang and Jon Halliday Asian Review of Books Archived from the original on 1 November 2005 Retrieved 20 November 2021 a b Pomfret John 11 December 2005 Chairman Monster The Washington Post Retrieved 20 November 2021 Haas Brent 2006 Mao The Unknown Story UCSD Modern Chinese History Research Site University of California San Diego Retrieved 20 November 2021 In this reviewer s opinion and those of China specialists including Perry Link An Abnormal Mind Times Literary Supplement 8 14 2005 Jonathan Spence Portrait of a Monster New York Review of Books 11 3 2005 Andrew Nathan Jade and Plastic London Review of Books 11 17 2005 Arthur Waldron and Jeffrey Wasserstrom Mao as Monster Chicago Tribune 11 6 2005 this is a much needed corrective But excluding Waldron s laudatory review Mao Lives Commentary 10 2005 scholarly reviewers found many problems with their research and citation methodology and blatant political axe to grind Specifically unhelpful citations manipulated interpretation of sources to suit their argumentation and blatantly unsourced assertions mar a seminal study of Mao based on a decade of research and geared towards an important political re evaluation of a horrible tyrant Benton Gregor Chun Lin eds 2010 Was Mao Really a Monster The Academic Response to Chang and Halliday s Mao The Unknown Story 1st ed Routledge ISBN 9780415493307 Hayford Charles W June 2011 Was Mao Really a Monster The Academic Response to Chang and Halliday s Mao The Unknown Story Pacific Affairs 82 2 32 33 doi 10 14288 1 0045080 Retrieved 20 November 2021 a b c d Link Perry 14 August 2005 An abnormal mind The Times Literary Supplement Archived from the original on 16 August 2007 Retrieved 20 November 2021 Haas Brent 2006 Mao The Unknown Story UCSD Modern Chinese History Research Site University of California San Diego Retrieved 20 November 2021 If Chang and Halliday s historical research is true although for the above reasons many assertions defy scholarly examination this book will sound the death knell of Mao s legacy Jonathan Spence noted 22 separate instances of historical revisionism that could challenge much of our understanding of Mao and the Chinese Revolution Spence 24 Notable but inexhaustive examples include Mao s lack of caring for the plight of Chinese peasants Stalin and the Comintern s crucial role in founding and funding the CCP and Mao s rise to power Mao s destruction of the Jinggang revolutionary base for political ends the Red Army s legendary Long March as a product of Chiang Kai shek s willingness to let them escape so his son would be returned from captivity in the Soviet Union the utter fabrication of the most famous tale of the Long March the battle at the Luding Bridge Mao s agreement to partition China with Stalin the list goes on and on Sun Shuyun 2006 The Long March HarperCollins pp 161 165 ISBN 000719479X Throwing the book at Mao The Age 8 October 2005 Retrieved 20 November 2021 a b McDonald Hamish 8 October 2005 A Swan s Little Book of Ire The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 20 November 2021 Brzezinski Zbigniew 9 March 2005 America and the New Asia PDF Speech Freeman Spogli Institute Stanford University Archived from the original PDF on 17 September 2006 Retrieved 20 November 2021 Zhang rong Maofa dong tǔgǎi shi yao nongmin guaiguai tinghua 張戎 毛髮動土改是要農民乖乖聽話 Jung Chang Mao launched land reform to make the peasants obedient Renminbao in Chinese 19 October 2006 Archived from the original on 6 May 2021 Retrieved 20 November 2021 Schram Stuart March 2007 Mao The Unknown Story The China Quarterly Cambridge University Press 189 205 208 doi 10 1017 s030574100600107x JSTOR 20192754 S2CID 154814055 Quoted at p 205 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint postscript link Schram Stuart March 2007 Mao The Unknown Story The China Quarterly Cambridge University Press 189 205 208 doi 10 1017 s030574100600107x JSTOR 20192754 S2CID 154814055 At p 207 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint postscript link O Neill Mark 6 July 2008 A hunger for the truth South China Morning Post Retrieved 20 November 2021 Becker Jasper 25 September 2010 Systematic genocide The Spectator Archived from the original on 11 April 2012 Retrieved 20 November 2021 Lodwick Kathleen L Spring 2005 Narcotic Culture A History of Drugs in China review China Review International 12 1 74 76 doi 10 1353 cri 2005 0147 ISSN 1527 9367 Mishra Pankaj 20 December 2010 Staying Power Mao and the Maoists The New Yorker Retrieved 21 November 2021 Dikotter Frank Mishra Pankaj 15 November 2011 Interview Frank Dikotter Author of Mao s Great Famine Updated Asia Society Asia Society Policy Institute Retrieved 21 November 2021 Short Philip 2016 Mao The Man Who Made China Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 9781786730152 It may be argued that these are quibbles factual errors occur in the best books However Dikotter s errors are strangely consistent They all serve to strengthen his case against Mao and his fellow leaders Rummel Rudolph 30 November 2005 Getting My Reestimate Of Mao s Democide Out Democratic Peace Archived from the original on 23 August 2021 Retrieved 9 April 2007 Charny Israel W 2016 The Genocide Contagion How We Commit and Confront Holocaust and Genocide Rowman amp Littlefield p 203 ISBN 9781442254367 Berger Alan L 2014 Post Holocaust Jewish Christian Dialogue After the Flood before the Rainbow Lanham Maryland Lexington Books p 98 ISBN 9780739199015 Rummel has been criticized for exaggerating the losses Even if the criticisms were valid a figure lower by 10 or 20 or even 30 percent would make absolutely no difference to the general conclusions that Rummel draws Karlsson Klas Goran Schoenhals Michael eds 2008 Crimes Against Humanity under Communist Regimes Research Review PDF Stockholm Sweden Forum for Living History p 79 ISBN 9789197748728 Retrieved 21 November 2021 It could quite rightly be claimed that the opinions that Rummel presents here they are hardly an example of a serious and empirically based writing of history do not deserve to be mentioned in a research review but they are still perhaps worth bringing up on the basis of the interest in him in the blogosphere Harff Barbara 2017 The Comparative Analysis of Mass Atrocities and Genocide PDF In Gleditish N P ed R J Rummel An Assessment of His Many Contributions SpringerBriefs on Pioneers in Science and Practice Vol 37 New York City New York Springer pp 111 129 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 54463 2 12 ISBN 9783319544632 Mao The Untold Story by Jung Chang and Jon Halliday Metacritic Archived from the original on 14 July 2011 Retrieved 20 November 2021 Montefiore Simon Sebag 29 May 2005 History Mao by Jung Chang and Jon Halliday The Sunday Times Retrieved 20 November 2021 Kristof Nicholas 23 October 2005 Mao The Real Mao The New York Times Retrieved 20 November 2021 Dyer Gwynne 13 June 2005 Mao Ten Parts Bad No Parts Good Gwynne Dyer Retrieved 20 November 2021 Hastings Max 5 June 2005 The long march to mass murder The Telegraph Retrieved 20 November 2021 Yahuda Michael 4 June 2005 Bad element The Guardian Retrieved 20 November 2021 Beach Sophie September 2005 CDT Bookshelf Richard Baum recommends Mao The Unknown Story China Digital Times Archived from the original on 6 April 2007 Retrieved 20 November 2021 Schram Stuart 16 March 2007 Mao The Unknown Story The China Quarterly Cambridge University Press 189 205 208 doi 10 1017 S030574100600107X JSTOR 20192754 S2CID 154814055 Quote at p 208 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint postscript link a b Nathan Andrew J 17 November 2005 Jade and Plastic London Review of Books Vol 27 no 22 Archived from the original on 11 May 2008 Retrieved 20 November 2021 Spence Jonathan 3 November 2005 Portrait of a Monster The New York Review of Books Archived from the original on 27 March 2020 Retrieved 20 November 2021 Goodman David S G September 2006 Mao and The Da Vinci Code conspiracy narrative and history The Pacific Review Routledge 19 3 39 384 doi 10 1080 09512740600875135 S2CID 144521610 Relevant pages at 361 362 363 375 376 380 381 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint postscript link Benton Gregor Tsang Steven January 2006 The Portrayal of Opportunism Betrayal and Manipulation in Mao s Rise to Power The China Journal University of Chicago Press 55 95 109 doi 10 2307 20066121 JSTOR 20066121 S2CID 144181404 Quote at p 96 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint postscript link Cheek Timothy January 2006 The New Number One Counter Revolutionary Inside the Party Academic Biography as Mass Criticism The China Journal University of Chicago Press 55 109 118 doi 10 2307 20066122 JSTOR 20066122 S2CID 145453303 Quotes at pp 110 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint postscript link Dittmer Lowell January 2006 Pitfalls of Charisma The China Journal University of Chicago Press 55 119 128 doi 10 2307 20066123 JSTOR 20066123 S2CID 143416569 Barme Geremie January 2006 I m So Ronree The China Journal University of Chicago Press 55 128 139 doi 10 2307 20066124 JSTOR 20066124 S2CID 144957272 Benton Gregor Chun Lin eds 2010 Was Mao Really a Monster The Academic Response to Chang and Halliday s Mao The Unknown Story 1st ed Routledge pp 9 11 ISBN 9780415493307 Gao Mobo 2008 The Battle for China s Past Mao and the Cultural Revolution Pluto Press p 11 ISBN 9780745327808 Ali Tariq November 2010 On Mao s Contradictions New Left Review No 66 Retrieved 20 November 2021 Karl Rebecca E 2010 Mao Zedong and China in the twentieth century world a concise history Durham NC Duke University Press pp ix ISBN 978 0 8223 4780 4 OCLC 503828045 a b Chang Jung Halliday Jon 4 December 2005 Letters A Question of Sources London Review of Books Vol 27 no 24 Retrieved 20 November 2021 Gillies Donald A 5 January 2006 Letters A Question of Sources London Review of Books Vol 28 no 1 Retrieved 20 November 2021 Hollander Paul 2016 From Benito Mussolini to Hugo Chavez Intellectuals and a Century of Political Hero Worship Cambridge University Press p 171 ISBN 9781108107617 Further reading EditLeese Daniel September 2007 The Pitfalls of Demonisation Mao The Unknown Story and its Medial Repercussions Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions 8 3 4 677 682 doi 10 1080 14690760701571320 ISSN 1469 0764 S2CID 144337070 External links Edit Mao The Unknown Story extract of the book from the publishers Some editions at Google Books New Bio Offers Sinister View of Chairman Mao NPR contains audio interview with Chang and Halliday Homo sanguinarius The Economist 26 May 2005 This book will shake the world by Lisa Allardice The Guardian 26 May 2005 Too much hate too little understanding by Frank McLynn The Independent on Sunday 5 June 2005 The long march to evil by Roy Hattersley The Observer 5 June 2005 The inhuman touch Mao The Unknown Story by Richard McGregor The Financial Times 17 June 2005 China experts attack biography s misleading sources by Jonathan Fenby The Observer 4 December 2005 Mao A Super Monster by Alfred Chan Pacific Affairs 2006 vol 79 No 2 China s Monster Second to None by Michiko Kakutani The New York Times 21 October 2005 The Mao That Roared by Adi Ignatius Time 23 October 2005 Presentation at the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at Harvard University by Chang and Halliday on Mao The Unknown Story 24 October 2005 C SPAN Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mao The Unknown Story amp oldid 1150429086, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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