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Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide.

Print Price: $109.99

Format:
Paperback
336 pp.
12 illus., 235 mm x 156 mm

ISBN-13:
9780195054545

Publication date:
April 1999

Imprint: OUP US


The Origins of Chinese Communism

Arif Dirlik

Based on a wealth of archival material released after Mao's death, this book offers a revisionist account of the introduction and triumph of Marxism in China. Dirlik shows that, in 1919, at the outset of the May Fourth Movement, anarchism was the predominant ideology among revolutionaries and intellectuals and Marxism was virtually unknown. Three years later, however, the Communist Party of China had emerged as the unchallenged leader of the Left. Dirlik disputes long-held beliefs about the domestic origins of Chinese Communism to argue that Communist thought and organization were brought into radical circles by the Comintern. Though Chinese radicals would not have turned to Communism unassisted, he concludes, Marxist ideology took hold easily when introduced from the outside. This book will prove indispensable to scholars of Chinese history and politics, Asian studies, Marxism, and comparative communism.

Reviews

  • "Revise[s] the commonly held view that it was the growing impact of the Russian revolution of 1917 which was decisive in the creation of the Chinese Communist Party."---Political Studies
  • "A most detailed and well-documented exegesis of socialism....Contains a wealth of material not included in other studies....Invaluable as a reference on the founding of the Communist Party of China."--The Annals of the American Academy
  • "A solidly grounded study of a shifting political discourse."--Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars
  • "A sophisticated study....Finely textured and filled with insights."--American Historical Review
  • "Looks like it serves a great need--to help students understand how and why Chinese intellectuals responded to the Russian revolution! It also helps to demystify the whole process of turning revolutionary thought into revolutionary action."--Roland L. Higgins, Keene State College
  • "Excellent, ground-breaking analytical study."--Linda Walton, Portland State University
  • "This book clarifies that turbulent period in modern China's history right after World War I....It presents detailed information about the radical network that developed in China between 1918and 1920...[and] emphasizes the important role played by Comintern representatives."--Anthony Garavente, California State University, Long Beach
  • "A lucid account of the various intellectual threads that constituted the origins of Communism in China. Dirlik shows the interplay of various Western ideologies, especially anarchism, in the formation of Chinese Communism. He gives students a very good idea of the intellectual ferment that was the May Fourth movement."--Lewis Bernstein, Brigham Young University
  • "Tightly argued, conscientiously documented. Revisionist approach--deemphasizing the example of the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution."--Lea E. Williams, Brown University
  • "Fascinating book! You should submit it for a book prize in East Asian history."--Anna M. Cienciala, University of Kansas
  • "Dirlik writes very interesting history. He uses the May 4th Movement as a commentary thread throughout the book--and convincingly. His notes are helpful as is the bibliography. My students will find this book challenging but pleasurable as well."--S. Carol Berg, College of St. Benedict
  • "An impressive work, combining scholarship with politics, Origins of Chinese Communism has moved the historiography of Chinese Communism to a higher plateau than the works of the previous generation of China scholars."--Donald M. Lowe, San Francisco State University
  • "This well-researched and well-written book places the political polarities of China in the 1920s and beyond in excellent context of intellectual and political history."--Suzanne W. Barnett, University of Puget Sound
  • Advance praise: "By far the most detailed, sophisticated, and comprehensive treatment of the origins of the Communist Party of China yet written. It is likely to be the standard work on the origins of the CCP for years to come. It is a gold mine of information and insights. In particular, it provides a very sophisticated analysis of the competing socialist doctrines, especially anarchism, in China at this time; and presents a perceptive account of the influence of the Russian Revolution on Chinese intellectuals."--Maurice Meisner, University of Wisconsin, Madison

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Arif Dirlik is at Duke University.

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