Shades of Mao: The Posthumous Cult of the Great Leader (3 page)

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Authors: Geremie Barme

Tags: #History, #Asia, #China, #Literary Criticism, #Asian, #Chinese, #Political Science, #Political Ideologies, #Communism; Post-Communism & Socialism, #World, #General, #test

BOOK: Shades of Mao: The Posthumous Cult of the Great Leader
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Page 4
But alas! Qin Shihuang and Han Wudi
Were lacking in literary grace,
And Tang Taizong and Song Taizu
Had little poetry in their souls;
And Genghis Khan,
Proud Son of Heaven for a day,
Knew only shooting eagles, bow outstretched.
All are past and gone!
For truly great men
Look to this age alone.
3
When Mao's poem "Snow," of which this is the last stanza, was first published in late 1945, a number of observers criticized the writer for indulging in "imperial fantasies." The last lines"For truly great men/Look to this age alone"the critics averred, did not refer to "the broad masses of the proletariat,'' as Communist Party commentators claimed, but to Mao and Mao alone.
4
The Shanghai writer Li Jie, whose critique of Mao is quoted at length in the present volume, comments on these lines: "Here was the peasant boy listing all of the major father figures of Chinese history, leaving the last and most glorious position, however, for himself" (see "The Mao Phenomenon"; references in parentheses are to material contained in this book). The poem exudes the bravado that Mao's opponents have excoriated for decades; nonetheless, it reflects the kind of self-assertiveness and egomania that continue to beguile those for whom Mao Zedong represents the abiding genius or eidolon of China.
Even before Mao's demise on 9 September 1976, there were those who speculated that in death Mao would "become even more sacred" and be deified in ways only hinted at during his last years.
5
But with the return of Deng Xiaoping to power in the late 1970s and after the protracted negation of Mao's legacy and the Cultural Revolution culminating in 1981, for nearly a decade it seemed that the Chairman had been safely relegated to the ranks of elder revolutionaries. Although Mao had played a pivotal role in the creation of the People's Republic and its first decades, in death he no longer exercised the charismatic power he had enjoyed in life.
From the late 1980s, however, Mainland China witnessed at first a fitful and then a nationwide revival of interest in Mao Zedong. Initially, the phenomenon was called a "search for Mao Zedong,"
6
and according to one commentator it was the fifth of its kind.
7
The official media, ever anxious to employ fashionable "buzzwords" for propagandistic purposes, soon dubbed it a "MaoCraze," the
Mao Zedong re
or simply
Maore.
In this book, the

 

Page 5
compressed term "MaoCraze" will be used to translate the Chinese expression
Maore,
while Mao Cult indicates the revival of Mao in its myriad forms from the late 1980s as discussed in this introduction and the editorial notes.
This Mao Cult was largely nonofficial and spontaneous. It continued up to the time of the government-orchestrated centenary of Mao's birth in 1993, and it would appear that popular enthusiasm for the Chairman waned in direct proportion to the authorities' promotion of Mao as the founding father of the Party, army, and state. The new Mao Cult was markedly different from the "personality cult" (
geren chongbai
in Chinese or, in post-1976 officialese,
zaoshen yundong
) of the Cultural Revolution.
8
Divested nearly entirely of its original class, ethical, and political dimensions, the new cult flourished throughout the country, prompting propagandists, commentators, and academics to analyze and declaim on the subject in the pages of the Mainland, Hong Kong, and Taiwanese press.
This short volume attempts to digest and elucidate some of that massive body of material with selections taken primarily from Mainland sources. Unfortunately, due to the limited nature of public debate in the Mainland media, in particular because of official strictures on books related to Mao (see "Publish and Perish"), many writers were unable to comment freely on the cult. Within the considerable body of material that did appear, however, diverse views were expressed, often with a frankness that would have been astounding in the not-too-distant past. The following selection is little more than a meager sampling of those materials. Although I have attempted to reflect as broad a range of opinions as possible and touch on the diverse phenomena that constituted the Mao revival, given the vastness of the topic I cannot claim that this book is an exhaustive survey. I can only hope that the present volume may act as an introductory guide to those who wish to delve further into this disturbing yet fascinating realm of Chinese popular culture.
Pulping Mao
During the Cultural Revolution even wedding ceremonies had to be "revolutionized." The newlyweds were invariably presented with copies of Selected Works of Mao Zedong or Quotations from Chairman Mao.
One couple received sixty-five copies of the Little Red Book and thirty-seven sets of Selected Works. When the guests had all left the bride said to her husband:
"What ever are we going to do with this great pile of books? We can't sell them or eat them, nor do we dare burn them. Not even our children or grandchildren will have any use for this many!"

 

Page 6
"Don't worry," the husband replied. "As Chairman Mao has instructed us [in his speech "The Foolish Old Man Who Removed the Mountains"]: `When your children die you will still have grandchildren, and after them their grandchildren and the grandchildren's grandchildren, and so on for infinity.' We might be faced with an unmovable mountain of books but it will never grow any taller and, volume by volume, the mountain can be shifted."
Cultural Revolution joke
9
The public history of the dismantling of the original Mao Cult after 1976 is perhaps best reflected in the fate of the Chairman's most tangible legacies to the nation: his word and his image.
A huge number of unsold and seemingly immutable copies of Mao's works were stockpiled, remaindered, throughout China. They came in all shapes and sizes, from the gaudy plastic-covered "Little Red Book,"
Quotations from Chairman Mao,
to traditional clothbound limited-edition versions of the four-volume
Selected Works of Mao Zedong
with extra-large print produced for Mao's myopic coevals. Not only were huge portions of the state publishing budget tied up in this vast mound of Mao-period paper in the late 1970s, but also many acres of floor space in warehouses throughout the country were devoted to storing what was now unpalatable but equally unpulpable political fiction.
One particularly famous storehouse of Mao's works was the "
Bawanba
" (literally, "eighty-eight thousand," the figure denoted the number of square meters of floor space in the building) at Huaqiao Xincun near the Beijing Zoo. In the late 1970s, long after the waning of the Mao Cult but still before the Party had put Mao in his place,
Bawanba
was still spoken of in hushed tones as though it were some sacrosanct repository (although some Beijing people, with their characteristic mordant wit, mocked the fact that it was now nothing more than a mausoleum to the dead letter of Mao's works). It was rumored that in
Bawanba
seemingly endless shelves held neat packages of Mao's works in Chinese, minority, and foreign-language editions preserved in a strictly controlled, air-conditioned and humidified environment. A special detachment of soldiers guarded the building and another group of caretakers methodically worked their way along the shelves, unwrapped the books, and leafed through them to prevent mold and decay, only to repack them once again until the next time they were scheduled for airing. Similar repositories were to be found throughout the country maintaining the written legacy of Mao for possible future use.
Because of the cost of storing the immense print runs of Mao's works and due to the pressing need for warehouse space for the many new titles being produced after the Cultural Revolution, in particular educational texts, by the late 1970s hard decisions regarding the Leader's works had to

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