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Coalitions of the weak : elite politics in China from Mao's stratagem to the rise of Xi / Victor Shih, University of California, San Diego.

Author/creator Shih, Victor C. author.
Format Book and Print
EditionFirst edition.
Publication Info Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2022.
Copyright Notice ̐u2022
Descriptionxv, 232 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.
Subject(s)
Series Cambridge Studies in Comparative Politics
Cambridge studies in comparative politics. ^A292134
Contents Introduction -- Coalition of the Strong: Mao's Predicament After the Great Leap Forward -- "Counterrevolutionary Splittists" in Mao's Ruling Coalition -- The Scribblers Mafia: Radical Ideologues in Mao's Coalition -- Realizing the Coalition of the Weak: Politics in the Late Mao Period -- The Collapse of the Coalition of the Weak and Power Sharing in the 1980s -- Weak Successors: The Final Calculus of the Founding Generation and the Rise of Xi Jinping -- Conclusion.
Abstract "In mid-1975, a sickly Mao had one of the last meetings with the Politburo. During the meeting, Mao shook hands with the entire Politburo, probably for the last time in his life. When he greeted alternate Politburo member and Vice Premier Wu Guixian, Mao confessed "I don't know who you are." An embarrassed Wu said "Chairman, we met in 1964 during the national day parade." Mao compounded her embarrassment by responding "I didn't know that" (Mao 1975). It was both surprising and expected that Mao had failed to recognize Wu. On the one hand, Wu's elevation into the Politburo and into the vice premier position had been recommended by Mao himself at the 10th Party Congress less than two years before Mao shook her hand (Teiwes and Sun 2007: 101). It was therefore astonishing that Mao failed to remember the name of his hand-picked political rising star. On the other hand, Wu was far from a revolutionary veteran with whom Mao had worked for decades like Deng Xiaoping or Ye Jianying. Mao greeted those two warmly at the meeting by calling them by their nicknames, "Xiaoping" for Deng and "Old Marshal" for Ye (Mao 1975). In contrast, Wu had only joined the party in 1958 and had been nothing more than a model worker until the beginning of the Cultural Revolution (Huang 2007). With the formation of the revolutionary committees at every level of governments starting in 1967, Wu found her career enjoying a rocket-like rise toward the center of power. Still, among the millions of model workers who had benefited from a class-based promotion system instituted during the Cultural Revolution, Wu's elevation to the Politburo was striking"-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographical references and index.
Issued in other formOnline version: Shih, Victor C. Coalitions of the weak First Edition. New York : Cambridge University Press, [2022] 9781009022859
LCCN 2021046581
ISBN9781009016513
ISBN9781316516959 hardcover
ISBN1316516954 hardcover
ISBN1009016512 paperback
ISBNelectronic publication

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