What China Remembers About The Cultural Revolution, And What It Wants To Forget | Hoover Institution

Friday, May 10, 2024
Hoover Institution | Stanford University
The Hoover Project on China’s Global Sharp Power, Stanford’s Center for East Asian Studies, and Stanford's Department of History held What China Remembers About the Cultural Revolution, and What it Wants to Forget on Friday, May 10, 2024 from 4:00 pm - 5:30 pm PT in the George P. Shultz Building, Shultz Auditorium.
The devastating movement unleashed by Mao in 1966, which claimed around two million lives and saw tens of millions hounded, shapes China to this day. Yet in a country where leaders have long seen history as a political tool, the Cultural Revolution is a particularly sensitive subject. How does the Chinese Communist Party control discussion of the topic? And how has an era which turned the nation upside down been used to maintain the political status quo?
ABOUT THE SPEAKERS
Tania Branigan writes foreign policy editorials for the Guardian and spent seven years as its China correspondent. Her book Red Memory: The Afterlives of China’s Cultural Revolution won the Cundill History Prize 2023 and was shortlisted for the Kirkus non-fiction prize, the Baillie Gifford prize and the British Academy Book Prize for Global Cultural Understanding. It was named as one of the Wall Street Journal’s ten best books of 2023 and TIME’s 100 must-read books of 2023.
Glenn Tiffert is a distinguished research fellow at the Hoover Institution and a historian of modern China. He co-chairs Hoover’s project on China’s Global Sharp Power and directs its research portfolio. He also works closely with government and civil society partners around the world to document and build resilience against authoritarian interference with democratic institutions. Most recently, he co-authored Eyes Wide Open: Ethical Risks in Research Collaboration with China (2021).

Пікірлер: 11

  • @PhilAllen117
    @PhilAllen11713 күн бұрын

    16:00 Britain’s wealth was not founded on slavery or even empire

  • @fs5775
    @fs577513 күн бұрын

    Suppressing emotions like anger & sadness is NOT the way, it will only create more problems. When will the Chinese learn?

  • @Rampton8810
    @Rampton881013 күн бұрын

    Change to "What it wants you to forget"

  • @dingoeatswolf3663
    @dingoeatswolf366313 күн бұрын

    Strength to those that keep the memory alive in China…

  • @jamie4422
    @jamie442213 күн бұрын

    My mom at the age of 5 used to bring lunches to my gradpa who was jailed during cultural revolution. I’m pretty sure there are a lot more details my mom remembers about that time but never tells me, because she apparently has deep traumas somewhere, they inflict pain on her, and indirectly, on everyone around. I’m never that interested and never ask. To me, creating an aspiring future is much more important than getting lost in the past, and I hope my peers can join me on that front.

  • @joristurk
    @joristurk13 күн бұрын

    Thank you

  • @StephenMortimer
    @StephenMortimer13 күн бұрын

    JUST BOUGHT HER BOOK.. AUDIBLE

  • @dingoeatswolf3663
    @dingoeatswolf366313 күн бұрын

    First? Waiting for the wumao comments to come. That’ll be interesting 🤔

  • @ckknecht6883
    @ckknecht688313 күн бұрын

    😂

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