Author(s):  
Wang Zheng

Challenging the assumption of “Party propaganda,” this chapter finds a feminist cultural front in the ACWF’s flagship magazine Women of China and illuminates state feminist discursive maneuvers that targeted masculinist practices in and outside the CCP.State feminist visionswere embodied in the magazine’svisual representation of laboring women who broke gender segregation in public arena, signifying feminist pursuits of women’s double liberation of gender and class, continuing a New Culture anti-feudalistagenda, and shaping new socialist subjectivity. Editors’ practices of the “mass line” in cultural production created a public space for women’s voices that expressed their own concerns, contrary to the assumption of the seamless domination of a party/state. The strategies of its feminist founding editors Shen Zijiu and Dong Bian to juggle multiple and often contradictory demands of the Party and diverse women groups areexamined against the fluid political contexts.


Modern China ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 43 (5) ◽  
pp. 494-522 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yanhua Deng

Autonomous redevelopment is a new approach to demolishing shantytowns in China. It draws on the desire for urban renewal on the part of most residents and encourages dingzihu, or “nail households,” to vacate their property. This is accomplished by formulating rules that link jumpstarting community redevelopment to submission by nail households. Additionally, an ad hoc grassroots organization, the Autonomous Redevelopment Committee (ARC), is often established to facilitate “demolition and relocation” 拆迁. To persuade recalcitrant homeowners, ARC activists rely on emotion work, marginalizing strategies, and collective harassment. Many homeowners, who are initially determined to resist such appeals, ultimately succumb to the power of the masses. Autonomous redevelopment is officially acclaimed as an innovative mass-line approach, relying on a majority of the masses to work on the minority. It suggests a more sophisticated style of authoritarian governance, whereby local authorities use rules, social ties, and grassroots organizations to control popular resistance and to facilitate policy implementation.


1951 ◽  
Vol 45 (2) ◽  
pp. 422-436 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Arthur Steiner

The Problem. Chinese communist leaders generally attribute their conquest of power to the faithful pursuit of effective “mass line” tactics. They now regard a “correct” mass line as the essential prerequisite for the full consolidation of power, for the successful implementation of the ambitious and farreaching policies to which they are committed, and for the ultimate transition from the “people's democratic dictatorship” to the complete socialist order. Recognizing that large numbers of cadres adequately trained in mass line tactics are critically needed for these purposes, the Chinese Communist Party intensified its cadre training program in 1950–1951 to insure that all party (and other public) workers would be carefully indoctrinated in basic Marxist-Leninist mass line theory and practice. Training in mass line tactics ranges in scope from propaganda to public administration, but finds its principal focus in the delicate area of the Party's public relations with the great masses of Chinese people who have yet to be sold on the communist program. The problem is so serious, and the need for a solution so urgent, that the party leadership has temporarily deferred several important social reforms pending the completion of the current cadre training program.


Modern China ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 225-240 ◽  
Author(s):  
Graham Young
Keyword(s):  

1964 ◽  
Vol 18 ◽  
pp. 68-78 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Wilson Lewis

China's rulers in 1961 surveyed their shattered dreams and then, with studied self-confidence, hailed the vitality of their revolutionary “mass-line” credo. This resolute re-affirmation of standard principles had a hollow ring, however, and doubts about the “real methods of control” employed during the years of retreat and readjustment coincided with angry charges that the language of the “mass-line” disguised terror and brutality on an appalling scale. In the confusion, fact has until recently seemed entwined irretrievably with propaganda and invective, but now a unique collection of the Kung-tso T'ung-hsun (Bulletin of Activities) makes it possible to disentangle the contradictory methods of control and leadership used in 1961 and to evaluate their widely varied effects in that crucial year.


Nematology ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 463-471 ◽  
Author(s):  
James R. Trotter ◽  
Daim Ali Darban ◽  
Simon R. Gowen ◽  
Alistair H. Bishop ◽  
Barbara Pembroke

Abstract We have obtained a single spore isolate of Pasteuria penetrans, derived by allowing a single spore to attach to a secondstage juvenile (J2) of the root-knot nematode Meloidogyne javanica. By analysing DNA sequences at three different loci we have obtained evidence that the isolate is, indeed, genetically pure. We compared the ability of the single spore isolate and the parent population from which it was selected to attach to and parasitise both the original population of M. javanica on which it was isolated and a single egg mass line derived from it. There was no difference in the attachment of spores of the single spore isolate to juveniles compared to the parental population, although there were higher numbers of both attaching to J2 of the single egg mass line compared to its parental population. Judging from the numbers of egg masses and Pasteuria -infected females, the single spore isolate was less pathogenic to the parental population of M. javanica than was the parental spore population.


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