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Collective killings in rural China during the cultural revolution

Part of the Cambridge Studies in Contentious Politics series
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The violence of Mao's China is well known, but its extreme form is not.

In 1967 and 1968, during the Cultural Revolution, collective killings were widespread in rural China in the form of public execution.

Victims included women, children, and the elderly. This book is the first to systematically document and analyze these atrocities, drawing data from local archives, government documents, and interviews with survivors in two southern provinces.

This book extracts from the Chinese case lessons that challenge the prevailing models of genocide and mass killings and contributes to the historiography of the Cultural Revolution, in which scholarship has mainly focused on events in urban areas.

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£145.00
Product Details
Cambridge University Press
110721503X / 9781107215030
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
951.056
21/02/2011
England
English
291 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
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