"Deng Xiaoping" Essays and Research Papers

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    Bias In History

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    When I saw Dan Brown’s quote “History is always written by winners”‚ it made me think whether he was correct; is history only written by winners? If so‚ is there bias in history because it is only written by winners? My real life situation is that Taiwanese history textbooks show bias in the information included and the view of the situation included. Whether information should be included in textbooks‚ or if both sides of an event should be included can be seen in a well-known event known as the

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    The Cultural revolution was a movement led by Mao Zedong to rid China of capitalist and tradition elements. He wanted to preserve Communist ideology. During this time‚ filmmakers were restricted on what kind of films they could make and their films would fit the revolutionary model drama. The Herdsmen and To Live are films that focus on the Cultural revolution and its impact on China’s people. In both movies‚ there is an emphasis on the ordinary people. However‚ there is more emphasis on intellectuals

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    A key factor to keep in mind when examining the Sino-Soviet dispute and its impact on foreign relations in South East Asia is that the region is characterised by shifting and fluid interactions and security arrangements (Yahuda‚ 1996: 9). This means coalitions can change‚ former enemies can become future allies and conflict is not easily defined. The Sino-Soviet alliance‚ based on a mutual belief in the ideology of Marxism-Leninism‚ degenerated over a period of more than ten years. While there

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    Lu Xun

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    Lu Xun’s short story “Diary of a Madman” marks the birth of modernism in Chinese literature and is the earliest literature works written in modern vernacular Chinese during the May Fourth period. Modeled after Nikolay Gogol’s story with similar title‚ the story condemns the old traditional Confucian values that have long persisted in the Chinese society; portrayed by the madman in the story that sees it as a ‘man-eating’ society. Lu Xun despises the idea of a society who adheres to the tradition

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    My Long March

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    The Critique of My Long March Lang. 3750 100 Dr. Xiaojun Wang The Critique of My Long March In my class‚ on July 1st‚ we watched a movie titled‚ My Long March‚ which was filmed in mainland China. This movie employed 110‚000 crew/actors and spanned over 6‚000 miles of the historical Red Army route. This movie was made in order to commensurate the Seventieth anniversary of the Long March. This film was directed by Zhai Jungie and produced by August First Film Studio in 2006. Zhai Jungie directed

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    In 1949‚ Mao Zedong led the Peoples Revolution‚ which established a Communist State in China. Communism has now been introduced to Asia. In this period‚ after World War II‚ Communism was a popular ideology being introduced throughout the world. Vietnam was one of the many countries under the threat of Communism. At this time‚ Vietnam was a French Colony. As time went on tension started to come between the French and the Vietnamese people. As tension increased so did the fighting between the French

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    Communism liberated women

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    Welcome everyone to the Brisbane ideas festival of 2014‚ I’m Frances Golding here to discuss the revolutionary emancipation of women in china under communist rule… Communism redefined China and the cultural normalities seen throughout its imperial period to represent a nation of gender amalgamation as opposed to discriminatory gender segregation (China.org.cn). This ideology established a concept on the basis that each person produced according to their ability and received according to their needs

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    Xu Gang’s "Red Azalea on the Cliff" This is a story of a man looking upon a beautiful red flower growing on the side of a cliff. Because it is so high above his reach‚ its beauty is enough to make his "heart shudder with fear." Although it is a magnificent flower‚ any man trying to reach for it risks possibly losing his life because it is unattainable. Gang was drafted in 1962 fighting to support Mao Zedong’s Great Proletarion Cultural Revolution‚ and this poem was written several years after

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    Blood Red Sunset By: Ma Bo This memoir of Ma Bo’s sent shock waves throughout China when it was published and was even first banned by the Communist Government. This passionate story paints a clear picture for what the Great Chinese Cultural Revolution was really like. Many Chinese living today can attest to similar if not identical ordeals as expressed in Ma Bo’s story. The toils of being a young Red Guard in inner China were experienced by many if not millions. The horrors and atrocities

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    Communist China uses propaganda and force to hide the truth from the public‚ as well as controlling them in a sense. Ha Jin writes Waiting and in this book he comments and portrays communist China in great detail. Waiting’s main character‚ Lin Kong‚ is commonly criticized as indecisive and unable to love. In an interview published in Asia Week in 1999‚ Ha Jin comments on Lin’s inability to love: allegorically…sum up a sort of internal psychological damage to the Chinese… the Revolution was to

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