ID | 100504 |
Title Proper | Nanjing's failed january revolution of 1967 |
Other Title Information | the inner politics of a provincial power seizure |
Language | ENG |
Author | Guoqiang, Dong ; Walder, Andrew G |
Publication | 2010. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Scholarship on factional warfare during the first two years of the Cultural Revolution has long portrayed a struggle between "conservative" factions that sought to preserve the status quo and "radical" factions that sought to transform it. Recent accounts, however, claim that the axis of political conflict was fundamentally transformed after the fall of civilian governments in early 1967, violating the central tenet of this interpretation. A close examination of Nanjing's abortive power seizure of January 1967 addresses this issue in some depth. The power seizure in fact was a crucial turning point: it removed the defenders of local authorities from the political stage and generated a split between two wings of the rebel movement that overthrew them. The political divisions among former rebel allies intensified and hardened in the course of tortuous negotiations in Beijing that were buffeted by confusing political shifts in the capital. This created a contest that was not between "conservatives" and "radicals" over the restoration of the status quo, but about the respective places of the rival radical factions in restored structures of authority. |
`In' analytical Note | China Quarterly Vol. 2010, No. 203; Sep 2010: p.675-692 |
Journal Source | China Quarterly Vol. 2010, No. 203; Sep 2010: p.675-692 |
Key Words | Nanjing ; January Revolution - 1967 ; Inner Politics ; Cultural Revolution ; Beijing |