Cards (25)

    • Mao Zedong - Communist leader who became first leader of China after the communist revolution in 1949
    • Korean War (1950-1953) - conflict between North Korea, supported by China and USSR, and South Korea, supported by USA and UN forces.
    • Mao‘s policies towards women:
      • women’s roles improved
      • encouraged to take a place in society
      • marriage law in 1950
      Consequences:
      • Made divorce easier
      • Men could only have one wife
    • Many peasants were illiterate:
      Mao launched literary campaign - 1950s
      • hugely successful
      1945 - New, easier written form of Mandarin introduced
    • Hundred flowers campaign (1956-57)
      Causes:
      • Believed showing discussion = communism superior over capitalism
      • Open debate - later opened to intellectuals
      Consequences:
      • Intellectuals criticised Mao
      • Shut down in less than a year
      • Replaced by anti-rightist movement
    • Agrarian Reform Law (1950)
      Causes:
      • Shared lands between peasants
      • People worked together (cooperative and collective farms)
      Consequences:
      • Landlords put on trial
      • Gained support of communists
    • First Five-Year Plan (1953-57)
      Causes:
      • Aid building of industries
      • Production boost of steel, coal etc
      Consequences:
      • Motivated workers passed all targets - steel production x2 in a year
      • State planning disorganised
      • Good transport lines set up all through China
    • The Great Leap Forward (Second five-year plan)(1958-63)
      Causes:
      • Small scale industry
      • Targeting agriculture
      • Communes to form
      Consequences:
      • Targets of production unrealistic
      • Steel unusable
      • Failure
    • The Great Leap Forward:
      ’Four Noes’ - agricultural policy:
      Affected crop production
      • Eradication of sparrows = more pests
      Consequences:
      • Serious famine and death
    • During the Cold War, China became increasingly isolated from other countries as it refused to join international organisations such as the United Nations.
    • In addition, China's economic policies, particularly the Great Leap Forward and Cultural Revolution, led to significant internal instability and suffering among its population.
    • Cultural Revolution -
      Mao called for young people to rid China of anti-communist elements
      Causes:
      • Wanted to attack four olds: old culture, old customs, old habits, old rituals
      • People betraying Mao after failure of Great Leap Forward
      • Needed to call upon Chinese people in case of war
    • Cultural Revolution -
      Red guards:
      • Young people
      • Went on a rampage
      Consequences of red guards:
      • Red guards formed rival factions
      • PLA disarmed red guards
    • Cultural Revolution -
      Overall consequences:
      • Destroyed monuments/treasures
      • Destroyed family life
      • China was a culture desert
      • Closure of universities = shortage in doctors
    • Dazhai -
      • Chen was leader
      1946: first mutual aids team
      1953-62: Chen proposed ’Ten-Year Reclamation Plan”
      • To build dams to enable land to be reclaimed + terraced
      • Terracing is symbolic of Dazhai
      Consequences:
      • Lots of terraces built
      • Lots of dams built
      • Not affected by famine
    • Dazhai -
      Became national model:
      • Copying Dazhai was obedience to China’s agricultural policy and loyalty to Mao
      Consequences: (Farming methods had disastrous effects)
      • People had different types of land - Mao failed to appreciate
      • Became a pilgrimage-like destination
      • Became a well-established villiage
    • Propaganda -
      Propaganda campaign - used to persuade people to support Mao’s ideals
      • Posters, loud speakers, newspapers
      • Loud-speakers to broadcast music
    • Mao’s Cult of Personality - Students who were personally loyal to Mao
      (Cult of personality grew)
    • Deng Xioping - succeeded Mao in 1976
    • Deng wanted reforms in: agriculture, science, technology and industry
    • Deng’s Agricultural Policies:
      • Communes abandoned
      Household responsibility system (1981)
      • Allowed peasants to sell excess profit
      • Entrepreneurial spirit
      Consequences:
      • Hugely successful
    • Deng’s Social Change:
      • National College Entrance Exam re-established (NCEE) (1978)
      • Open-door policy - students went abroad
      • One-child policy (1978)
      • Increase in infanticide
      • Imbalance of population
    • Deng’s Industrial Policies:
      • More freedom: businesses make decisions and sell excess for profit
      • Open-door policies - promoted relations with west
      Set up ’Special Economic Zones’
      • E.g in Hong Kong and Taiwan
      • Workers paid on performance
      • No state control - no guaranteed jobs
    • Deng’s Political change:
      • ’Four Cardinal Principles’ (1979) - maintains existing system
      • Democracy wall - way to voice opinion
      • Removed Mao’s ‘Four Great Freedoms’ (1978)
      • Ministry of Justice re-established
      • Introduced some electoral reforms
    • My Lai Massacre - (1968) During Vietnam war
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