Sabtu, 01 Maret 2014

Ebook Free , by Frank Dikötter

Ebook Free , by Frank Dikötter

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, by Frank Dikötter

, by Frank Dikötter


, by Frank Dikötter


Ebook Free , by Frank Dikötter

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, by Frank Dikötter

Product details

File Size: 4039 KB

Print Length: 433 pages

Publisher: Bloomsbury Press; 1 edition (May 3, 2016)

Publication Date: May 3, 2016

Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC

Language: English

ASIN: B01DNDPPH8

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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#162,044 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)

A superbly researched and written account of Mao Zedon's dictatorship, focusing on how he designed The Cultural Revolution to destroy his Communist Party enemies and millions of decent Chinese. His enduring hatred of the educated class did more harm to China than all its external enemies, as teachers, writers, artists, and small businessmen were wiped out or driven to suicide through public torture. A primer in how a dictator manipulates the political and military apparatus to destroy their own people in the name of Marxism-Leninism.

I have read Dikotter's earlier Mao's great Famine. I just finished this. A very well-written and enjoyable (albeit tremendously sad) book.First, I am a fan for some reason of history of mid-20th century political pathologies. So I have read a lot of Stalin books and a lot of Hitler books. If you are not particularly interested in that topic--or more particularly interested in China--then you may find this dry. But if you have any interest at all in the topic, you will find it enjoyable.The story is told in chapters that correspond to phases of the Cultural Revolution. This makes the book a little hard to follow, since (this was one thing I learned) the Cultural Revolution was far from linear. Mao lent support first to one faction then to another. Power ebbed and flowed between factions, yesterday's political oppressors becoming today's political prisoners (and then back again).Random amazing fact: Demand, instilled by a desire to avoid being politically suspect, for copies of Mao's Little Red Book was so high that industrial output had to be redirected; soap production fell by 15% nationally to allow for production of the book.For the general reader (like me) the book is well written and clear enough to be enjoyable. From the footnotes, it appears the Dikotter has been in the archives a lot. Nealy all the notes refer to original sources.Good book.

How much suffering can one people bear?Read The Cultural Revolution: A People's History, 1962—1976 by Frank Dikötter and you will have your answer.The history of China can be one of many lows; wars, famines, poor leadership, imperial occupation and exploitation. Yet The Cultural Revolution was particularly cruel. Mao simply enacted this ‘movement’ as an exercise in raw power. He wanted to destroy his enemies, both real and perceived, to sow chaos, to throw his people into a pool of confusion, dislocation and death simply because he could.Reading this book helps in understanding some of the absurdities and tragedies at the heart of Chinese history. The Chinese are a dynamic people and with vibrant culture. Yet their natural genius has been poorly harnessed for so long. This book is simply an extreme example of this at work. How can a people who experienced The Cultural Revolution not be deeply scared?

There is an inherent fallacy in the five-star grading system. "I love it" does not even vaguely describe my feelings after reading this book. "I dread it, and yet compulsively read it" describes it much better, because Dikotter's book is like watching Middle Ages hanging cum quartering cum disembowling live. In a reserved academic style, backed by a mountain of evidence, the author almost dispassionately describes the starving, torturing, killing, maiming, and de-humanizing of the innumerable number of people in the most populous country in the world. It is hard to decide what is more frightening - the personal stories brought into the book as a way of illustrating what happened, or the unimaginable scale of this worst crime ever throughout all ages. The communist party machinery led by Mao Zedung destroyed the lives of hundreds of millions of people of at least two generations, killing or starving more than 50,000,000 citizens. Gingis Han, the Vikings, Ivan the Terrible, Napoleon, Keiser Willhelm, even Stalin, Hitler,and Kim Il Sung pale into puny little tyrants by comparison. It is true that the bulk of the starved victims were exterminated in the great Mao famine following the Great Leap Forward in the fifties and predated the Cultural Revolution. Yet the mass starvation may have been less cruel than the utter inhuman modelling and remodelling of 800,000,000 during the Cultural Revolution, The Cultural Revolution Counter-Revolution, and the revival of the Cultural Revolution. Although Cultural Revolution may have resulted an death of "only" millions, the souls of hundreds of millions were systematically murdered. Those that survived had to undergo hunger, persecution, rape, disease, and continuous haranguing by the party cadres. In one chapter, cannibalism of the black-elements is reported, with the party leaders getting the best parts, i.e. hearts and livers. Mr. Dikotter puts a mirror in which our own tolerance of this horror is gruesomely reflected. We protest apartheid, we demonstrate against racism, we boykott Israel, we accuse the Hutus of genocide, yet the real or imaginary crimes of these alleged pepetrators are as a grain of sand against the Sahara of the Chinese Communist Party. And remeber, nobody was brought to justice. The West embraced Mao's and post-Mao's China and Apple churns out its i-phones in a country where no reckoning and spiritual purification was ever allowed, and the same monsters still rule. "Oh, the horror of it" (Joseph conrad, Heart of Darkness)

Another nice entry by Dikötter into Chinese history. He covers the era in depth, with all of the death, denunciations, and economic calmity that happened in this time period (along with some of the ingenuity and entrepreneurship of the times, as well). I found the entry on the Great Leap Forward to be a more fascinating read, but this book is still eye-opening. You certainly get the sense of the great respect Dikötter (and the reader also gets) has for the Chinese people in getting though the Cultural Revolution.

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