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Source: Library of
Congress - Country
Studies: China
- barefoot
doctor
- Especially during the Cultural Revolution (q.v.), a paramedical worker possessing minimal formal
training who provided part-time medical service, primarily in rural areas.
Promoted basic hygiene, preventive health care, and family planning and
treated common illnesses. Acted as a primary health-care provider at the
grass-roots level.
- big-character posters (dazibao)
- Posters, limited-circulation newspapers, excerpted press
articles, pamphlets, and blackboard news using large-sized
ideographs and mounted on walls as a popular form of communication.
Used in China since imperial times but more commonly since literacy
increased after the 1911 revolution. Used more frequently after
1949 to publicize party programs and as a means of protest. Became
ubiquitous during the Cultural Revolution (q.v.); guaranteed as one of the "four big rights" in
the 1975 state constitution.
- cadre
- Person who holds any responsible position in either
the party or the governmental apparatus throughout the nation. Term usually
denotes a person in administrative work. It often denotes, in a more
restricted sense, a person who has been fully indoctrinated in party ideology
and methods and uses this training in his or her work.
- China Proper
- Used broadly to mean China within the Great Wall, with
its eighteen historic provinces. Divisible into two major, sharply contrasting
regions, north China and south China. The dependencies on the north and
west--Manchuria (now usually referred to as northeast China), Mongolia, Xizang
(Tibet), and Xinjiang or Chinese Turkestan--were known in the imperial era as
Outer China.
- Chinese
People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC)
- A quasi-constitutional united front (q.v.)
organization that provides an institutional framework for
interaction between party and state leaders and representatives of
mass groups and democratic parties (q.v.).
Members include distinguished scholars, educators, and intellectuals, key
representatives of religious and minority nationality groups, and leading
members of political parties loyal to the Chinese Communist Party during the
anti-Guomindang years. The first CPPCC convened in 1949, the second in 1954,
the third in 1959, the fourth in 1964, the fifth in 1978, and the sixth in
1983, the seventh was scheduled for 1988. The CPPCC's 1949 Common Program
served as the law of the land until superseded by the 1954 state constitution.
- class struggle
- In Marxist terms, the conflict waged by the masses of
the workers and the oppressed under the leadership of the communist party
against the privileged, oppressive, and property-owning ruling class. Until
late 1978, class struggle was the official line of the Chinese Communist
Party.
- Comintern
- Short form for Communist International or the Third
International, which was founded in Moscow in 1919 to coordinate the world
communist movement. Officially disbanded in 1943, the Comintern was revived as
the Cominform (Communist Information Bureau) from 1947 to 1956.
- county (xian)
- Rural administrative unit below the provincial level.
- Cultural
Revolution
- A slogan introduced by Mao Zedong in 1940, noted again by Liu
Shaoqi in 1958, and used more frequently in connection with leftist
attacks on the "cultural front" in late 1965 and early 1966. The
expression was used to denote the Great Proletarian Cultural
Revolution, a political campaign officially inaugurated in August
1966 to rekindle revolutionary fervor of the masses outside formal
party organizations. The Cultural Revolution decade (1966-76) can
be divided into three periods: 1966-69, from the militant Red Guard
(q.v.) phase to the Ninth National Party Congress; 1969-
71, the period of the zenith and demise of Lin Biao; and 1971-76,
the period of Mao's declining health and the ascendancy of the Gang
of Four (q.v.). At the August 1977
Eleventh National Party Congress, the Cultural Revolution was declared
officially to have ended with the arrest in October 1976 of the Gang of Four.
- danwei (work unit)
- The basic-level organization through which party and government
officials control social, political, and economic behavior of
residents. The danwei typically controls the
allocation of housing, grain, edible oil, and cotton rations; the issuance of
permits to travel, to marry, and to bear or adopt children; and permission to
enter the army, party, and university and to change employment.
- "Democracy
Wall"
- A wall in the Xidan district in Beijing where,
beginning in December 1978, in line with the party's policy of
"seeking truth from facts," activists in the democracy movement
recorded news and ideas, often in the form of big-character posters
(q.v.). These activists were encouraged to criticize
the Gang of Four and previous (failed) government policies, but the wall was
closed in December 1979 when the leadership and the communist party system
were being criticized along with past mistakes and leaders. The shutdown
coincided with suppression of political dissent.
- democratic
centralism
- A system through which the people influence the
policies of the government and party members influence the policies of the
party; while the government and party maintain centralized administrative
power to carry out the policies demanded by their constituents. Within both
representative and executive organizations, the minority must abide by the
decisions of the majority, and lower bodies must obey the orders of the higher
level organizations. The concept, derived from the organizing principles of
the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, was called for as early as 1928 by
Mao Zedong.
- democratic
parties
- Eight political parties that have been loyal to the
communist government since 1949. They are China Association for Promoting
Democracy, China Democratic League, China Democratic National Construction
Association, China Zhi Gong Dang (Party for Public Interest), Chinese
Peasants' and Workers' Democratic Party, Jiusan (September Third) Society,
Guomindang Revolutionary Committee, and Taiwan Democratic Self-Government
League.
- "expert"
- Term usually juxtaposed with "red" (q.v.). Denotes special knowledge or skills, or both,
relating to economic management, science, and technology. Cadres are required
to be both red and expert, the emphasis on one or the other depending on the
current political milieu.
- fiscal year
(FY)
- January 1 to December 31.
- Five Principles
of Peaceful Coexistence
- Mutual respect for each other's territorial integrity
and sovereignty; mutual nonaggression; mutual noninterference in each other's
internal affairs; equality and mutual benefit; and peaceful coexistence.
Originated with a 1954 agreement between Zhou Enlai and India's Jawaharlal
Nehru.
- four cardinal
principles
- Socialism; dictatorship of the proletariat; supporting
the party leadership; and Marxism-Leninism-Mao Zedong Thought. In vogue in
China since 1979.
- Four
Modernizations
- The core of a development strategy aimed at turning
the country into a relatively advanced industrialized nation by the year 2000.
The modernizations are those of agriculture, industry, science and technology,
and national defense. The concept was embodied first in the Third Five-Year
Plan (1966-70), launched in earnest by Zhou Enlai at the Fourth National
People's Congress (1975), and adopted as the official party line at the Third
Plenum of the Eleventh Central Committee (December 1978).
- Gang of Four
- Term used by the post-Mao leadership to denote the four leading
radical figures--Jiang Qing (Mao's fourth wife), Zhang Chunqiao,
Yao Wenyuan, and Wang Hongwen--who played a dominant political role
during the Cultural Revolution (q.v.) decade (1966-76) until
Mao's death in September 1976 and their arrest several weeks later. Their
"antiparty" deeds are often linked with Lin Biao, an early leader of the
Cultural Revolution, who also has been discredited.
- Great Leap
Forward
- A drive to increase industrial and agricultural production
following the suspension of Soviet aid and the desire to catch up
with the advanced nations of the world. The campaign was conceived
by Mao Zedong in late 1957, adopted by the National People's
Congress (q.v.)in 1958; it continued through 1960. Emphasis was
placed on accelerated collectivization of agriculture, national
self-sufficiency, and labor-intensive methods. The campaign resulted in
widespread waste of resources and was partially responsible for famine in 1960
and 1961.
- Great
Proletarian Cultural Revolution
- See Cultural Revolution.
- gross national
product (GNP)
- The total value of final goods and services produced
in the economy. The "estimated GNP" figures used in the text are estimates by
United States government analysts of Chinese GNP according to the U.S.
definition, which includes personal consumption, gross investment, all
government expenditures, and net exports. Through mid-1987, Chinese
calculations of national income excluded government and personal services,
passenger transportation, and depreciation investment.
- Han
- Also Han Chinese. Term used to designate the ethnic
majority, which constitutes 93 percent of the population. The fifty-five
minority nationalities make up the remainder.
- Hundred
Flowers Campaign
- Also Double Hundred Campaign. Party-sponsored
initiative to permit greater intellectual and artistic freedom. Introduced
first into drama and other arts in the spring of 1956 under the official
slogan "Let a hundred flowers bloom, let the hundred schools of thought
contend." With Mao's encouragement in January 1957, the campaign was extended
to intellectual expression and, by early May 1957, was being interpreted as
permission for intellectuals to criticize political institutions of the
regime. The effect was the large-scale exposure and purge of intellectuals
critical of party and government policies.
- "iron rice bowl"
- A Chinese idiom referring to the system of guaranteed
lifetime employment in state enterprises, in which the tenure and level of
wages are not related to job performance.
- Long March
- The 12,500-kilometer-long trek made by the Red Army in
the face of the Guomindang's "annihilation campaigns." Began in October 1934
in Jiangxi Province and ended in October 1935 in Shaanxi Province. Some
100,000 persons left the communist base area in Jiangxi but only about 28,000
arrived in Yan'an, Chinese Communist Party headquarters for the next decade.
It was during the Long March that Mao Zedong gained his preeminent role in the
party.
- Mao Zedong Thought
- Sayings and writings of Mao that served as a major
source of national ideology until his death in 1976 and since then have
undergone a cautious but critical reappraisal. By 1980 the meaning of the term
had expanded to include the collective thoughts of all key party leaders.
- "mass line"
- Term for party policy aimed at broadening and
cultivating contacts with the masses of the people and to accentuate the
leadership role of the Chinese Communist Party.
- mass movement
- Derived from the concept of "mass line" (q.v.). Party- directed campaign designed to mobilize
the masses in support or execution of major policies. Such movements were
characteristic of the 1950s through the 1970s and were controlled and
coordinated by permanent mass organizations.
- National
People's Congress
- Highest organ of the state, elected in accordance with the
principles of democratic centralism (q.v.). As of 1987,
six congresses had been held, the first (1954), second (1959),
third (1965), fourth (1975), fifth (1978), and sixth (1982), the
seventh was scheduled for 1988; annual sessions were held most
years except during the Cultural Revolution (q.v.). The Standing
Committee is the permanent organ of the National People's Congress and
functions between annual sessions.
- neighborhood
- Term in general use in China for the urban administrative unit
usually found immediately below the district level, although an
intermediate, subdistrict level exists in some cities. Also called
streets (administrative terminology varies from
city to city). Neighborhoods encompass 2,000 to 10,000 families. Within
neighborhoods, families are grouped into smaller residential units of 100 to
600 families and supervised by a residents' committee; these are subdivided
into residents' small groups of fifteen to forty families.
- New Culture
Movement
- Refers to the period between 1917 and 1923, which was
marked by student and intellectual ferment and protests against the warlord
government. Culminated in the May Fourth Movement of 1919.
- one country, two
systems
- A policy originating in the early 1980s that promotes
reunification of Hong Kong, Macao,and Taiwan with the mainland and offers them
a high degree of autonomy as special administrative regions of China. Through
separate agreements with Britain and Portugal, Hong Kong and Macao are to
revert to Chinese control in 1997 and 1999, respectively.
- overseas
Chinese
- Term usually used to refer to any person of Chinese
origin living abroad on a permanent basis, without regard to his or her
current citizenship. Overseas Chinese minorities are concentrated principally
in Southeast Asia but are also found in other parts of Asia, the Middle East,
Europe, North America, South America, and the Caribbean. Overseas Chinese have
long been important to the government in power in China as a source of
business contacts and of financial and moral support from abroad. The majority
of foreign investment in China is by overseas Chinese, and more than 90
percent of all foreign tourists who visit China are overseas Chinese. Also
used in China to refer to persons living in China who have returned from
sojourns abroad.
- people's
commune
- Formerly the highest of three administrative levels in rural
areas in the period from 1958 to 1982-85, when they were replaced
by townships (q.v.). Communes, the largest collective
units, were divided in turn into production brigades and production
teams (q.v.). The communes had governmental,
political, and economic functions.
- production
brigade
- Formerly the intermediate administrative level in the people's
commune system, the organizational structure of the collective
sector in agriculture. The highest level was the commune; the
lowest, the production team. Most brigades were transformed into
townships or villages in the period from 1982 to 1985. (See
also people's commune,
production team, townships, villages.)
- production
team
- Formerly the basic accounting and farm production unit in the
people's commune system. Production teams were largely disbanded
during the agricultural reforms of 1982-85. In the administrative
hierarchy, the team was the lowest level, the next higher levels
being the production brigade and people's commune. Typically the
team owned most of the land and was responsible for income
distribution. Since 1984 most teams have been replaced by villages.
(See also people's commune,
production brigade, village.)
- putonghua
- The common spoken language; also called guoyu
(national language). The official spoken language of China, used in
its various forms by more than 70 percent of the population. The
People's Republic government started promoting putonghua
in 1956 for use in schools, the cultural arena, and daily life as
a means of bringing about the standardization of the language used
by the Han (q.v.) nationality. Putonghua is based on the northern dialect, and uses
Beijing pronunciations as its standard.
- "red"
- A term referring to political and ideological attitudes
prescribed by Maoist doctrine. Usually juxtaposed with "expert"
(q.v.), the term was seldom used in the 1980s.
- Red Guards
- Generally used to refer to young people--primarily students--in
their teens and twenties who began in May 1966 to support the
leftist intraparty struggle then emerging against Liu Shaoqi and
others. They made world famous the "little red book,"
Quotations from Chairman Mao, and were known for their use
of big-character posters (q.v.) during the Cultural
Revolution (q.v.). Acting under the leadership of Mao and his
radical adherents, Red Guards were the "soldiers" and the vanguard of the
Cultural Revolution. The term Red Guard was derived from the early days of the
Chinese Communist Party's armed struggle.
- rehabilitation
- A practice dating from the early years of the Chinese
Communist Party. Denotes the reinstatement in positions of responsibility of
former government and party officials and military personnel who had been
accused of wrongdoing. Rehabilitations sometimes take place posthumously to
clear a former leader's name and reputation.
- responsibility system
- A practice, first adopted in agriculture in 1981 and
later extended to other sectors of the economy, by which local managers are
held responsible for the profits and losses of the enterprise. This system
partially supplanted the egalitarian distribution method, whereby the state
assumed all profits and losses.
- revisionism
- As used by communists, term refers to political,
economic, and social tendencies that stray to the right of orthodox Marxism-
Leninism. The Chinese communists long insisted that these tendencies were
counterrevolutionary and that internal and external enemies (such as the
Soviet Union) were infected by this negative phenomenon.
- Socialist
Education Movement
- Inaugurated in September 1962 at the Tenth Plenum of the Eighth
National Party Congress Central Committee as a mass ideological
campaign for both party cadre and the general population. The
movement was patterned along the lines of the Yan'an rectification
campaign of 1942-45 and was intended to increase ideological
"correctness" and consciousness, especially in regard to reversing
"capitalist" and "revisionist" tendencies perceived in social and
economic life. The Socialist Education Movement, which continued at
least until 1965, is considered a precursor of the Cultural
Revolution (q.v.).
- special
economic zones
- Small coastal areas established beginning in 1979 to
promote economic development and introduction of advanced technology through
foreign investment. Special preferential terms and facilities are offered to
outside investors in taxation, land-use fees, and entry and exit control for
joint ventures, cooperative ventures, and enterprises with sole foreign
investment. Special economic zones have greater decision-making power in
economic activities than provincial-level units. Market regulation is primary.
- township (xiang)
- The basic government administrative unit below the county level
in rural areas. Townships existed before people's communes were
organized in 1958 and were reconstituted when production brigades
and communes were disbanded during the period 1982-85. Each
township has a people's congress and an elected chairman. In the
mid-1980s, townships were about the same size as the communes they
had replaced. (See also county, people's communes, productions brigades.)
- united front
- Chinese Communist Party strategy that attempts to
utilize an organization or movement for the purpose of building a consensus
and an organized following for party-supported programs and goals.
Historically, the term is associated with the Guomindang-Chinese Communist
Party first united front (1923-27) and second united front (1937-45).
- village (nong cun)
- Replaced production brigades (q.v.) from 1982 to 1985 as the lowest-level
semiofficial government entity. They provide bureaucratic coordination, and
welfare payments and settle disputes. Party branches are usually organized at
the village level.
- yuan (-Y)
- China's monetary unit, which in mid-1987 had an exchange rate
of US$1 to -Y3.72, or -Y1 to US$.269. The yuan is divided into 100
fen, and 10 fen constitute 1 jiao. The currency is known as
renminbi (RMB), meaning the people's currency. The
inscription renminbi (or renminbiao) appears on
bank notes as well as yuan, and the terms renminbi and
yuan are used synonymously in quoting exchange rates. In
transactions the terms are universally replaced by the word
kuai (piece). Beginning in
the early 1980s, the standard currency was paralleled by a special
currency called Foreign Exchange Certificates, which were issued in
exchange for "hard" foreign currencies.
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