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Maoist Propaganda Maoist Propaganda

Maoist Propaganda - PowerPoint Presentation

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Maoist Propaganda - PPT Presentation

The Peoples Liberation Army represents the great school of Mao Zedong Thought Maoist Propaganda Criticize the old world and build a new one with Mao Zedong Thought as our guide Monsters and Demons ID: 374159

cultural mao revolution propaganda mao cultural propaganda revolution art people china literature arts media poster red class amp hey

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Slide1

Maoist Propaganda

“The People's Liberation Army represents the great school of Mao Zedong Thought”Slide2

Maoist Propaganda

“Criticize the old world and build a new one with Mao Zedong Thought as our guide”Slide3

Monsters and Demons

'Monsters and Demons' (牛鬼蛇神 niugui sheshen) was the term used to vilify specialists, scholars, authorities and 'people who entrenched themselves in ideological and cultural positions' during the Cultural Revolution. Slide4

Monsters and Demons

Once people were 'dragged out' as 'evil spirits', they were forced to wear caps, collars or placards identifying them as such. Being 'cow monsters', they were imprisoned in what was generally called a 'cowshed' (牛棚,niupeng). This did not have to be a genuine stable; it could be a classroom, storehouse, dark room or temple. In the absence of legal procedures, the length of stay in the 'cowshed' could be ten days or ten years. Slide5

Propaganda: Controlling the Arts and MediaSlide6

The Arts, Media, & Propaganda

When speaking about the Cultural Revolution (1966-1970), Mao said, “Our purpose is to ensure that literature and art fit well into the whole revolutionary machine as a component party, that they operate as powerful weapons for uniting and educating the people and for attacking and destroying the enemy, and that they help people fight the enemy with one heart and one mind”

Students were to make “big-character posters” which would called for students to cut class and travel across the country to meet other young activists and propagate Mao Zedong’s ideasSlide7

Propaganda: Brainwashing and Controlling the Media

The people would also put up propaganda posters. They played a major supporting role in the many campaigns that were designed to mobilize the people. Most of them showed people doing model behavior.

The one below represents the concept of “ we must grasp revolution and increase production, work, and preparation and do an even better job”Slide8

The Arts, Media, & Propaganda

During the Cultural Revolution:Red Guards broke into people’s homes burned books, cut up paintings, trampled records and broke musical instrumentsFilms were censored by Mao’s wife

Writers wore large insulting wooden plaques hung from thin wire around their necks

Many artists and other people were beaten and sent to reeducation camps

There was a loss of cultural heritageSlide9

Madam Mao & Cultural Revolution

Jiang QingMadam Mao

Her field was culture and her background was an actress from Shanghai.

Advisor of the Arts to the Army.

Attacks against artists who are capitalists.

All western art is prohibited. Revolutionary culture is good.

Madam Mao produces propaganda for Chairman Mao through art & film, this acts as a pretext to the Cultural Revolution.Slide10

Madam Mao Propaganda Poster ArtSlide11

Cultural Revolution

Jiang Qing, Mao's wife, dominated cultural productions during this period. The ideas she espoused through eight "Model Operas" were applied to all areas of the arts. These operas were performed continuously, and attendance was mandatory.  Proletarian heroes and heroines were the main characters in each.

To the right is an advertisement for the opera, "The Red Women's Army," a story about women from south China being organized to fight for a new and equal China. Note the use of ballet shoes and postures.

 Jiang Qing emphasized "Three Stresses" as the guiding principle behind these operas. 

 

Based on the way that the figures are arranged, can you guess to what the "Three Stresses" refers?

Slide12
Slide13
Slide14

14

Controlling the mediaPower of art and literature

Art and literature political

Only character development was when all traditional bases for friendship were abandoned and replaced by shared class consciousnessSlide15
Slide16

16

Ideological TrainingsMass meetings held

In schools and colleges students discussed the wisdom of Mao’s words and why he was always correct

Mao’s role in the revolution became the subject of plays, films and novels

Newspapers dedicated front pages to his sayingsSlide17
Slide18

Propaganda Posters

This poster says," The sunlight of Mao Zedong Thought illuminates the road of the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution”

Propaganda posters are the use of messages designed to influence public opinion.

Discussion Question

:

Do you think this poster is fact or opinion?Slide19

Art and PoliticsDuring the Cultural Revolution

During the Cultural Revolution, under Madame Mao’s guidance, China re-defined art as a political tool.She reinvented the Beijing Opera and Ballet dance forms to include class struggle themes.

This ballet play poster depicts a scene from the Revolutionary Ballet, The Red Army Detachments. The headline of the poster says

“Only by saving the entire human race can the proletarian class free itself.” Slide20
Slide21

Literature

During the Cultural Revolution, almost all forms of creative literature were made illegal. All western books were banned and destroyed, and no one was able to publish any literature unless it supported the Communist National Party.

Mao

Tse-tung

published many works himself, and almost everyone in China was forced to carry around a book of his quotations known as the “Little Red Book.”Slide22

Music

Music, like all other forms of art, only existed in the form of propaganda.

Typical songs were titled “The East is Red,” “Long Live Chairman Mao,” and “I Love Beijing's Tiananmen.”

This song is entitled, “I am a Little Member of the Commune.”

I am a little member of the commune,

with a little sickle in my hand,

and a bamboo basket on my shoulder.

I go to work after class, cutting weeds, collecting manure, and picking up the lost wheat ears.

The more I work, the more I love it.

Ayh-hey-hey, Aye-hey-hey,

Always keeping in mind the good character of the poor-and-lower-middle peasants,

Loving the collective and loving labor,

I am a little member of the commune!Slide23

At one point in China calligraphy had been considered the greatest form of art above painting and dancing. The Chinese language consists of 6000-7000 characters, each with an intricate design.

During the Cultural Revolution, all forms of art, calligraphy, painting, dancing, and singing, were reduced to those that supported the Communist National Party.

Art

“Let the new Socialist Performing Arts conquer every stage.”Slide24

The Three Main Rules of Discipline are as follows:

Obey orders in all your actions.

Do not take a single needle piece of thread from the masses.

Turn in everything captured.

EtiquetteSlide25

Mao lashed out at organized religion in China. He blamed religion for China’s problems and under his rule many different types of temples and churches were burned to the ground or converted into government buildings.

However, some people began to worship Mao, and Mao worship evolved into a cult activity.

ReligionSlide26

Emulation Campaign: Specific Focus of One Propaganda CampaignSlide27

27

Emulation Campaigns

1962 Lei Feng appeared, orphaned by brutal landlords and Japanese aggression and saved by communist forces, had developed a profound love for his fellow proletarians

Socialist heroes for the people to emulateSlide28

Cultural Revolution: Culture and Film

Jiang Qing (

江青

) emerges through the cultural domain to assert herself politically

Prescribed aesthetics promoted an extreme version of socialist realism dominated by the “two unities” (

liang jiehe

两结合

) and the “three prominences” (

san tuchu

三突出

)

Two unities

: socialist realism and revolutionary romanticism

Three prominences

: give prominence to the positive characters, the hero

e

s, and the principal heroSlide29

29Slide30

30Slide31

31Slide32

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