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ID148770
Title ProperWhodunnit? memory and politics before the 50th anniversary of the cultural revolution
LanguageENG
AuthorWeigelin-Schwiedrzik, Susanne ;  Susanne Weigelin-Schwiedrzik (a1) and Cui Jinke (a2) ;  Jinke, Cui
Summary / Abstract (Note)Song Binbin, the daughter of prominent CCP politician Song Renqiong, has long been accused of having played a role in the death of Bian Zhongyun which took place at the Girls' Middle School in Beijing Normal University on 5 August 1966. In January 2014, she publicly apologized for the violence that occurred at her school during the summer of 1966. However, instead of applauding her act of contrition, rebel participants of the Cultural Revolution used the opportunity to criticize the sons and daughters of high-ranking cadres and to try to overturn the 1981 official evaluation of the Cultural Revolution by promoting a positive view of that period in Chinese history. This paper analyses the background, consequences and implications of Song Binbin's apology from a political science cum memory studies perspective. It argues, against the background of a changing political landscape in the People's Republic of China, that the memory of the Cultural Revolution remains a battlefield of divergent memory groups and multiple narratives. In the memory of today, the struggles of the Cultural Revolution have still not come to an end.
`In' analytical NoteChina Quarterly , No.227; Sep 2016: p.734-751
Journal SourceChina Quarterly No 227
Key WordsMemory ;  Chinese Cultural Revolution ;  Chongqing Model ;  Song Binbin ;  Bian Zhongyun


 
 
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