Modern History Tuesday 8 November 2016 Paper Two Historical sources book

Similar documents
Modern History Wednesday 10 November 2010 Paper Two Historical sources book

Modern History Senior External Examination. Paper Two Historical sources book. Directions. Contents. After the examination session

Modern History Senior External Examination. Paper Two Historical sources book. Wednesday 11 November :00 pm to 3:40 pm.

Mao Zedong Communist China The Great Leap Forward The Cultural Revolution Tiananmen Square

Mao Zedong - Great Leap Forward - Cultural Revolution

Pre-Revolutionary China

T H E I M PA C T O F C O M M U N I S M I N C H I N A #27

2009 Senior External Examination

Experience and Reflection on the Popularization of Marxism Seventeen Years After the Founding of China

A Discussion on Deng Xiaoping Thought of Combining Education and Labor and Its Enlightenment to College Students Ideological and Political Education

The History and Political Economy of the Peoples Republic of China ( )

20 Century Decolonization and Nationalism. Modified from the work of Susan Graham and Deborah Smith Lexington High School

MODERN HISTORY 3 UNIT (ADDITIONAL) HIGHER SCHOOL CERTIFICATE EXAMINATION. Time allowed One hour and a half (Plus 5 minutes reading time)

Modern History Friday 11 November 2011 Paper Two Historical sources book

Teacher Overview Objectives: Deng Xiaoping, The Four Modernizations and Tiananmen Square Protests

Imperial China Collapses Close Read

The Principal Contradiction

Vladimir Lenin, Extracts ( )

The Other Cold War. The Origins of the Cold War in East Asia

CIEE in Shanghai, China

Timeline Cambridge Pre-U Mandarin Chinese (9778 and 1341)

GCSE MARKING SCHEME SUMMER 2016 HISTORY - STUDY IN-DEPTH CHINA UNDER MAO ZEDONG, /05. WJEC CBAC Ltd.

General Program and Constitution of the Communist Party of China Table of Amendments 2017

Advances in Computer Science Research, volume 82 7th International Conference on Social Network, Communication and Education (SNCE 2017)

UNIT 6 THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION

China s Reform and Opening Process A Fundamental Political Project

The Approaches to Improving the Confidence for the Basic Economic System of Socialism with Chinese Characteristics

Study Center in Shanghai, China

Wayne Price A Maoist Attack on Anarchism

Reading Essentials and Study Guide

Nationalist Party (Pro-Democracy) led by Chiang Kai-Shek & supported by U.S. VS. Communist Party led by Mao Zedong supported by Soviet Union.

June, 1980 East German Report on the Eleventh Interkit Meeting in Poland, June 1980

Key Question: To What Extent was the Fall of Hua Guofeng the Result of his Unpopular Economic Policies?

COLONEL JOHN E. COON, USA

The History and Political Economy of the Peoples Republic of China ( )

Part IV Population, Labour and Urbanisation

Study Center in Shanghai, China

The Impact of. Mao Zedong, Great Leap Forward, Cultural Revolution, & Tiananmen Square

CHINA. History, Government, and Political Culture

Classicide in Communist China

The consolidation of the Communist State,

Markscheme May 2015 History route 2 Higher level and standard level Paper 1 communism in crisis

Who wants to be a. Expert on the Cold War?!

Chapter 30 Revolution and Nationalism

Introduction to the Cold War

Open the following documents from my website. Chinese Nationalism Notes

Version 1. This 1960s Chinese song would most likely have been sung during the 1) Boxer Rebellion 2) Cultural Revolution

Lecturer, Douglas Lee, PhD, JD

A-LEVEL History. Paper 2P The Transformation of China, Additional Specimen Mark scheme. Version/Stage: Stage 0.1

China Review. Geographic Features that. separate China/India. separates China & Russia. Confucian - - China s most influential philosopher (thinker).

MERLE GOLDMAN INTERVIEW

Socialism in one country

China s Fate: Jiang Jieshi and the Chinese Communist Party

Nationalists Communists

Ref. No.202/KCP-CHQ/2010 Date 22/09/2010

CHAPTER 34 - EAST ASIA: THE RECENT DECADES

Social fairness and justice in the perspective of modernization

(3) parliamentary democracy (2) ethnic rivalries

BIOGRAPHY OF DENG XIAOPING PART - 1. By SIDDHANT AGNIHOTRI B.Sc (Silver Medalist) M.Sc (Applied Physics) Facebook: sid_educationconnect

Lecture 3 THE CHINESE ECONOMY

In Refutation of Instant Socialist Revolution in India

Modern World History - Honors Course Study Guide

China s Road of Peaceful Development and the Building of Communities of Interests

Course Title Course Code Recommended Credits Suggested Cross Listings Language of Instruction: Prerequisites/Requirements Description Objectives

One Lesson or Two? Political & Economic Change in the People s Republic of China

Living in our Globalized World: Notes 18 Antisystemic protest Copyright Bruce Owen 2009 Robbins: most protest is ultimately against the capitalist

Republic of China Flag Post Imperial China. People s Republic of China Flag Republic of China - Taiwan

On the Theoretical Value and Practical Significance of the Anti-Poverty Thought of Socialism with Chinese Characteristics

On 1st May 2018 on the 200th anniversary of the birth of Karl Marx, and on the 170th anniversary of the first issue of Il Manifesto of the Communist

A WANING KINGDOM 1/13/2017

Thursday, October 7, :30 pm UCLA Faculty Center - Hacienda Room, Los Angeles, CA

Magruder s American Government

Unit 5: Crisis and Change

Twentieth-century world history

Type 2 Prompt. Following the Revolution of 1911, what happened to China? Was it stable or unstable? Who was in control, if anyone? Write 3 lines.

Enlightenment of Xi Jinping s Theory of National Rejuvenation on Ideological and Political Education of University Students

Topic outline The Founding of the People s Republic of China

Research Why the Party Congress is key for China s road ahead

Poland Views of the Marxist Leninists

China s policy towards Africa: Continuity and Change

World Leaders: Mao Zedong

BOSTON UNIVERSITY. CHINA: FROM REVOLUTION TO REFORM CAS IR 370/PO 369 Semester I 2007/2008 Mon., Weds., Fri.: 10:00-11:00 CAS 116

Essential Question: How did both the government and workers themselves try to improve workers lives?

Teacher Overview Objectives: Karl Marx: The Communist Manifesto

Technology Hygiene Highly efficient land use Efficient premodern agriculture. As a result, China s population reached 450 million by 1949.

Aspects of the United Kingdom's Government Parliamentary

Chinese Nationalism in the Global Era

Transcript of the Interview with Akio Takahara

Chinese Nationalist Party, Chinese Civil War

Magruder s American Government

Establishment of the Communist China. 1980s (Grand strategy, Military build-up, UNPKO, Multilateralism, Calculative strategy)

China Legal Briefing* 266

Cruel, oppressive rule of the Czars for almost 100 years Social unrest for decades Ruthless treatment of peasants Small revolts amongst students and

The Common Program of The Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, 1949

Wallingford Public Schools - HIGH SCHOOL COURSE OUTLINE

Unit 7. Historical Background for Southern and Eastern Asia

History Revolutions: Russian Teach Yourself Series Topic 3: Factors that contributed to the revolution

Voluntarism & Humanism: Revisiting Dunayevskaya s Critique of Mao

History 3534: Revolutionary China Brooklyn College, The City University of New York Study Abroad in China Program

UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON Department of History

Transcription:

2016 Senior External Examination Modern History Tuesday 8 November 2016 Paper Two Historical sources book 1 pm to 3:40 pm Directions You may write in this book during perusal time. Contents Seen sources (Sources A L) Unseen sources (Sources 1 12) Acknowledgments After the examination session Take this book when you leave. For all Queensland schools

Planning space

Note: The spelling of Chinese names may occur in either the older Wade-Giles form or the more recently adopted Pinyin form, e.g. Guangzhou (Canton), depending on the timeframe of the origin of the source. Names like Mao Zedong (Mao Tse-tung) are, however, readily recognisable in either form. Seen sources (Sources A L) Source A China at the start of the 20th century A French cartoon from before the First World War. Britain, Germany, Russia, France and Japan are dividing up China. The caption reads: In China: The cake of kings and emperors. www.hodderplus.co.uk/modernworldhistory/pdf/maos-china-1930-76.pdf 1

Source B The Communists and nationalism The Communists, for their part, after shedding the theoretical internationalism that had hampered their early efforts, could plausibly claim to be more nationalist than the Nationalists, and indeed the only real nationalists. Whatever may have been the hidden thoughts and real feelings of the two parties during the war with Japan and the civil war, the evidence is beyond dispute; it was the Chinese Revolution, and only the Chinese Revolution that brought the Chinese nationalism to fruition Bianco, L and Bell, M (trans) 1971, Origins of the Chinese Revolution, 1915 1949 Source C The Mandate of Heaven: the basis of imperial rule The Chinese developed a way to explain these changes of dynasties; they called it the Mandate of Heaven. They believed that the emperor ruled by the will of Heaven; indeed the emperor was sometimes called the Son of Heaven and his throne was called the Celestial (Heavenly) Throne. He had the mandate (authority or permission) of Heaven to rule the people as long as he ruled wisely. Because the emperor had the authority of Heaven, the people had a duty to obey him. The idea of the Mandate of Heaven was linked to the teachings of Confucius. He had taught that society was based on different relationships. In the family the father had authority over his family; in the country the emperor had authority over his people. Mason, KJ, Fielden, P, Burgess, C et al 2004, Experience World History: Kingdoms, Dynasties and Colonies Source D The contribution of Marxism Leninism Marxism Leninism helped the Chinese for a number of reasons. In the pre-war period it gave them the confidence and moral support of belonging to a world movement; it claimed to be scientific and therefore modern; it was disliked by the Western countries and therefore acceptable to Chinese who felt let down by the West; it was optimistic in its assurance that the stage of feudalism must lead through capitalism to socialism; it provided a rationale and a programme for putting ordinary people in the centre of the picture while insisting that an elite group (the Communist Party) must always lead. Moreover, it fitted into the Chinese traditional pattern of authority-centred society, dominated by an educated elite held together by a common philosophy and commitment to the service of the state. Milston, G 1978, A Short History of China Source E Mao s contribution Mao Tse-Tung s great accomplishment has been to change Marxism from a European to an Asiatic form China is a semi-feudal, semi-colonial country in which vast numbers of people live at the edge of starvation, tilling small bits of soil In attempting the transition to a more industrial economy, China faces the pressures of advanced industrial lands There are similar conditions in other lands of Southeast Asia the course chosen by China will influence them all. From a 1946 interview between Shaoqi, L (Head of State, 1959 1968) and Strong, AL in Morcombe, M & Fielding, M 1999, The Spirit of Change: China in Revolution 2

Source F People s tribunal, 1953 A people s tribunal sentencing a landlord. This man was sentenced to death. www.hodderplus.co.uk/modernworldhistory/pdf/maos-china-1930-76.pdf (photo credit: Bettman/Corbis) Source G Tung Hsiu-Ching, an original resident, quoted in China Reconstructs, 1973 Before liberation, our land three manys many poor people, many slum houses and many children With liberation in 1949, we working people stood up and became masters of the new society. As soon as the People s Liberation Army men entered the city, they got us together and explained the revolution to us. The people s government began solving the problem of unemployment and we all got jobs. With stable monthly wages, our life improved steadily. Our people s government thinks of everything for us. More than 100 families have moved into new apartments or houses. The homes of the others have been well-repaired. The street s housing management office always asks for the opinions of the neighbourhood representatives before they distribute or renovate housing. If anything goes wrong with the electricity, water or drains, we just tell the office and it sends repairmen right away. www.johndclare.net/china7.htm 3

Source H Strengthen the study of Marxism-Leninism-Mao Zedong Thought http://chineseposters.net/themes/mao-thought.php 4

Source I Two statements by Deng Xiaoping about the need for reform in China 1978: If we do not carry out reform (political and economic) now, our cause of modernisation and socialism will be ruined. 1986: As economic reform progresses, we deeply feel the necessity for change in the political structure. The absence of such change will hamper the development of productive forces. Deng, Xiaoping in Burke, P 1999, Heinemann Outcomes: Studies of Asia Source J Has the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) transformed itself since 1978? Overall, it seems clear that the CCP has undergone a significant transformation since 1978. Many aspects of the Party including its composition and the declining role of ideology would be unrecognisable to the Maoist era, whilst Deng Xiaoping, Jiang Zemin and Hu Jintao have emphasised absolute stability at any cost, a striking contrast from Mao s chaotic regime. The importance of maintaining political stability in order to facilitate economic development has become central to the party s role, and the declining significance of ideology has resulted in a shift in the party s fundamental legitimacy to its capacity to deliver the economic goods. To a large extent, the institutionalisation and reform program has achieved this stability, but major problems such as widespread corruption remain. However, the Party has adopted a dynamic approach to development and appears flexible in dealing with the challenges of the contemporary world whilst still maintaining its iron grip on power. Hawkes, S 2011, Has the Chinese Communist Party transformed itself since 1978? Source K The policy of de-maoisation The policy of de-maoisation was accelerated in 1978 81, as the new moderate leadership pushed further along the paths of modernisation and increased cooperation with the industrial West. The policy of Four Modernisations in industry, agriculture, defence and technology stressed practical achievement. Experts and specialists were again to be respected, education was to have high priority and material incentives were restored. The policy also implied an inevitable strengthening of relationships with capitalist powers, which could provide the investment, products and expertise China needed to achieve these goals. Foreign technology and technical imports were actively sought. Cowie, HR 1987, Asia and Australia in World Affairs, Vol. 3 5

Source L Land of hope and opportunity Chappatte in Le Temps (Geneva) 2012, http://globecartoon.wordpress.com End of Seen sources 6

Unseen sources (Sources 1 12) Source 1 Nationalism in China: Two historians views Chinese nationalism was actually partly a creation of Western imperialism, says Minxin Pei, a senior associate in the China program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Pei says the first surge of Chinese nationalism was seen in 1919 in what s now widely referred to as the May 4th Movement when thousands of students demonstrated against the Treaty of Versailles transfer of Chinese territory to Japan. Some of these student leaders went on to form the Chinese Communist Party two years later in 1921. The current Chinese communist government is more a product of nationalism than a product of ideology like Marxism and Communism, says Liu Kang, a professor of Chinese cultural studies at Duke University. Kang says today nationalism has probably become the most powerful legitimating ideology. Pei, M and Kang, L in Bajoria, J 2008, Nationalism in China Source 2 Mao s Great Leap to Famine The worst catastrophe in China s history, and one of the worst anywhere, was the Great Famine of 1958 to 1962, and to this day the ruling Communist Party has not fully acknowledged the degree to which it was a direct result of the forcible herding of villagers into communes under the Great Leap Forward that Mao Zedong launched in 1958. To this day, the party attempts to cover up the disaster, usually by blaming the weather. Yet detailed records of the horror exist in the party s own national and local archives. Access to these files would have been unimaginable even 10 years ago, but a quiet revolution has been taking place over the past few years as vast troves of documents have gradually been declassified. While the most sensitive information still remains locked up, researchers are being allowed for the first time to rummage through the dark night of the Maoist era. www.nytimes.com/2010/12/16/opinion/16iht-eddikotter16.html?_r=0 7

Source 3 Chairman Mao visits a homemade blast furnace, 1958 http://chineseposters.net/posters/pc-1958-007.php Source 4 The Hundred Flowers Campaign of 1957 Known as the Hundred Flowers Campaign, Mao s new policy had a dramatic effect. For the next several weeks, China s intellectuals answered the chairman s call for criticism with a vengeance derived from years of CCP oppression. Finding itself the subject of serious criticism, the Party soon repealed its newly adopted liberal policy and placed the intellectuals under even more strict control. Despite its early demise, however, the Hundred Flowers Campaign had far-reaching effects on the direction of the People s Republic of China and the CCP s view of intellectual debate. Under Mao s leadership, these policies hindered China s modernisation efforts and would eventually culminate in the disastrous Cultural Revolution. Jackson, JM 2004, An Early Spring: Mao Tse-tung, the Chinese Intellectuals and the Hundred Flowers Campaign 8

Source 5 The Cultural Revolution, 1967 The caption reads: Chairman Mao teaches us: It is up to us to organise the people. As for the reactionaries in China, it is up to us to organise the people to overthrow them. Revolutionary Rebel factions unite to wage the Proletarian Cultural Revolution to the end! http://chineseposters.net/posters/pc-196b-002.php 9

Source 6 Long live great Marxism-Leninism-Mao Zedong Thought During the cultural revolution, the representation of Marx played a great role in the attempts to position Mao Zedong as the last living and therefore most relevant contributor to Marxism. http://chineseposters.net/themes/marx.php Source 7 Official view of Mao, post-cultural Revolution Before and after the convocation of the Third Plenary Session of the Eleventh Central Committee, the Party led and supported the large-scale debate about whether practice is the sole criterion for testing truth. The nationwide debate smashed the traditional personality cult of Chairman Mao Zedong and shattered the argument of the two whatevers *, the notion pursued by then Party Chairman Hua Guofeng after the death of Chairman Mao. The erroneous notion included that whatever policy decisions Mao had made must be firmly upheld and whatever instructions he had given must be followed unswervingly. The statement first appeared in an editorial entitled Study the Documents Carefully and Grasp the Key Link, which was published simultaneously in the People s Daily, the Liberation Army Daily and later in the monthly journal Hongqi, or the Red Flag. The debate upheld again the ideological principles of emancipating the mind and seeking truth from facts and brought order out of chaos. * We will resolutely uphold whatever policy decisions Chairman Mao made, and unswervingly follow whatever instructions Chairman Mao gave. The Central People s Government of The People s Republic of China, 1978 10

Source 8 The four modernisations The [Party] Centre believes that in realising the four modernisations in China we must uphold the four basic principles in thought and politics. They are the fundamental premise for realising the four modernisations. They are [as follows]: 1. We must uphold the socialist road. 2. We must uphold the dictatorship of the proletariat. 3. We must uphold the leadership of the Communist Party. 4. We must uphold Marxism-Leninism and Mao Zedong Thought. http://afe.easia.columbia.edu/ps/cup/deng_xiaoping_uphold_principles.pdf Source 9 Deng The present situation and the tasks before us (1980) First is essential to follow a firm and consistent political line. We now have such a line. In his speech at the meeting in celebration of the 30th anniversary of the founding of the People s Republic, Comrade Ye Jianying formulated the general task or, if you will, the general line as follows: Unite the people of all our nationalities and bring all positive forces into play so that we can work with one heart and one mind, go all out, aim high and achieve greater, faster, better, and more economical results in building a modern, powerful socialist country. The socialist system is one thing, and the specific way of building socialism another. This superiority [of the socialist system] should manifest itself in many ways, but first and foremost it must be revealed in the rate of economic growth and in economic efficiency. Without political stability and unity, it would be impossible for us to settle down to construction. This has been borne out by our experience in the more than twenty years since 1957 In addition to stability and unity, we must maintain liveliness when liveliness clashes with stability and unity, we can never pursue the former at the expense of the latter. The experience of the Cultural Revolution has already proved that chaos leads only to retrogression, not to progress http://afe.easia.columbia.edu/ps/china/deng_xiaoping_present_situation.pdf Source 10 Modernisation Given China s backwardness, modernisation would require assistance from foreign countries. During the Cultural Revolution, the Chinese government had put up barriers against influence from outside and its foreign relations were in general very constricted. But Deng Xiaoping instituted the slogan openness to the outside (duiwai kaifang) and set about improving relations with foreign countries, especially those which he believed were in a position to help China s modernisation. Mackerras, C, Taneja, P & Young, G 1994, China since 1978: Reform, Modernisation and Socialism with Chinese Characteristics 11

Source 11 China s economic performance Note: Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is a measure commonly used to determine the economic performance of a country. www.china-mike.com/chinese-history-timeline/part-15-deng-xiaoping Source 12 How long can the Communist party survive in China? How long the heirs to Mao s 1949 revolution can hang on to power has been a perennial question since the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre and the disintegration of the Soviet Union. Many dire predictions of imminent collapse have come and gone but the party has endured and even thrived, especially since it opened its ranks to capitalists for the first time a decade ago. These days the revolutionary party of the proletariat is probably best described as the world s largest chamber of commerce and membership is the best way for business people to network and clinch lucrative contracts. In less than five years the Chinese Communist party will challenge the Soviet Union (69 or 74 years in power depending how you count it) and Mexico s Institutional Revolutionary Party (71 years until 2000) for the longest unbroken rule by any political party. Modernisation theory holds that authoritarian systems tend to democratise as incomes rise, that the creation of a large middle class hastens the process and that economic slowdown following a long period of rapid growth makes that transition more likely. Serious and worsening inequality coupled with high levels of corruption can add to the impetus for change. www.ft.com/cms/s/2/533a6374-1fdc-11e3-8861-00144feab7de.html End of Unseen sources 12

Acknowledgments Seen sources Source A Hodder Education Group, www.hodderplus.co.uk/modernworldhistory/pdf/maos-china-1930-76.pdf. Source B Bianco, L and Bell, M (trans) 1971, Origins of the Chinese Revolution, 1915 1949, Stanford University Press, California, USA. Source C Mason, KJ, Fielden, P, Burgess, C et al 2004, Experience World History: Kingdoms, Dynasties and Colonies, McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd, Sydney, NSW. Source D Milston, G 1978, A Short History of China, Cassell, Sydney. Source E Morcombe, M and Fielding, M 1999, The Spirit of Change: China in Revolution, McGraw-Hill Australia, North Ryde, NSW. Source F Hodder Education Group, www.hodderplus.co.uk/modernworldhistory/pdf/maos-china-1930-76.pdf. Source G Clare, JD, www.johndclare.net/china7.htm. Source H Landsberger, SR and the International Institute of Social History, The Netherlands, political poster, http://chineseposters.net/themes/mao-thought.php. Source I Burke, P 1999, Heinemann Outcomes: Studies of Asia, Heinemann, Melbourne. Source J Hawkes, S 2011, Has the Chinese Communist Party transformed itself since 1978?, www.e-ir.info. Source K Cowie, HR 1987, Asia and Australia in World Affairs, Vol. 3, Thomas Nelson Australia, Melbourne. Source L Chappatte in Le Temps (Geneva) 2012, http://globecartoon.wordpress.com. 13

Unseen sources Source 1 Bajoria, J 2008, Nationalism in China, Council on Foreign Relations, USA, www.cfr.org. Source 2 The New York Times Company, Mao s Great Leap to Famine, 16 December 2010, www.nytimes.com/2010/12/16/opinion/16iht-eddikotter16.html?_r=0. Source 3 Landsberger, SR and the International Institute of Social History, The Netherlands, political poster, http://chineseposters.net/posters/pc-1958-007.php. Source 4 Jackson, JM 2004, An Early Spring: Mao Tse-tung, the Chinese Intellectuals and the Hundred Flowers Campaign, http://filebox.vt.edu. Source 5 Landsberger, SR and the International Institute of Social History, The Netherlands, political poster, http://chineseposters.net/posters/pc-196b-002.php. Source 6 Landsberger, SR and the International Institute of Social History, The Netherlands, political poster, http://chineseposters.net/themes/marx.php. Source 7 The Central People s Government of The People s Republic of China, History, China Factfile, http:// english.gov.cn. Sources 8 and 9 Deng, Xiaoping, Uphold the Four Basic Principles, 30 March 1979, speech excerpt, Asia for Educators, Columbia University, New York, http://afe.easia.columbia.edu/ps/cup/ deng_xiaoping_uphold_principles.pdf. Source 10 Mackerras, C, Taneja, P and Young, G 1994, China since 1978: Reform, Modernisation and Socialism with Chinese Characteristics, 3rd edn, Longman Pearson Education, Sydney. Source 11 China Mike, www.china-mike.com/chinese-history-timeline/part-15-deng-xiaoping. Source 12 The Financial Times Ltd, How long can the Communist Party survive in China?, 20 September 2013, www.ft.com/cms/s/2/533a6374-1fdc-11e3-8861-00144feab7de.html. Every reasonable effort has been made to contact owners of copyright material. We would be pleased to hear from any copyright owner who has been omitted or incorrectly acknowledged. 14

The State of Queensland (Queensland Curriculum and Assessment Authority) 2016 Copyright enquiries should be made to: Manager Publishing Unit Email: publishing@qcaa.qld.edu.au Queensland Curriculum & Assessment Authority PO Box 307, Spring Hill QLD 4004 Australia Level 7, 154 Melbourne Street, South Brisbane T + 61 7 3864 0299 www.qcaa.qld.edu.au