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10 - The Chinese Communist Movement to 1927

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

Jerome Ch'en
Affiliation:
York University, Toronto
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Summary

There is nothing intrinsically wrong in committing oneself to a political doctrine initially on emotional grounds. ‘How many Parisians had read Rousseau and how many St Petersburgers had read Marx before they plunged into their revolutionary movements? The point is that in their minds the ideas of Rousseau and Marx had already existed; Rousseau and Marx did no more than articulate these ideas.’ Revolution is a mass phenomenon which, however, achieves mass action only through the contemplation and planning of its leading elite. When the record comes under scholarly scrutiny, undue emphasis on the intellectual process of the leadership, which to some extent shapes the fast moving events, tends to downplay the role of mass emotions and mass demands. However inarticulate these emotions and demands may be, they are understood by the revolutionary leaders of the time, who are themselves guided by their own emotions and intellect, their own spontaneity and consciousness. Neither Lenin nor Trotsky was an exception to this. The interaction of emotion and intellect, instead of simplifying, makes the conversion to a political doctrine even more complicated. In the case of China between 1917 and 1921 the conversion to Marxism involved the perception of Chinese reality on the part of the converts, their personal temperament and traits, and their understanding of the doctrine itself.

CONVERSION TO THE DOCTRINE

The military weakness and economic misery of China had been clear to politically conscious Chinese long before the advent of Marxism; hence the call for national power and wealth. But it was not until the rise of reformist thought, including its more conservative t’i-jung school (see chapter 7), that the concept of 'a China worthy of devotion' began to emerge.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1983

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References

d'Encausse, H. and Schram, S. R., eds. Marxism and Asia: an introduction with readings. London: Allen Lane, Penguin Press, 1969
Fischer, Louis. The Soviets in world affairs: a history of the relations between the Soviet Union and the rest of the world. 2 vols. London and New York: Jonathan Cape, 1930
Glunin, V. I.. ‘Komintern i stanovlenie kommunisticheskogo dvizheniia v Kitae (1920–1927)’. (The Comintern and the formation of the communist movement in China (1920–1927)). Komintern i Vostok; bor'ba za Leninskuiu strategiiu i taktiku v natsional'no-osvoboditel'nom dvizhenii (Comintern and the Orient; the struggle for the Leninist strategy and tactics in the national liberational movement). Moscow: Glav. Red. Vost. Lit., 1969Google Scholar
Harrison, James Pinckney. The long march to power: a history of the Chinese Communist Party, 1921–72. New York & Washington, D.C.: Praeger, 1972
Isaacs, Harold R.Documents on the Comintern and the Chinese revolution’. CQ, 54 (Jan.-March 1971)Google Scholar
Isaacs, Harold R. The tragedy of the Chinese revolution. 1st edn, London: Secker and Warburg, 1938; rev. edn, Stanford; Stanford University Press, 1951
Muramatsu, Yūji. ‘A documentary study of Chinese landlordism in late Ch'ing and early republican Kiangnan’. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 29.3 (1966)Google Scholar
Schram, Stuart R. Political leaders in the twentieth century: Mao Tse-tung. Harmondsworth, England: Penguin Books, Ltd., 1966
Tong, Hollington K., Chiang Tsung-t'ung chuan (A biography of President Chiang), Taipei, 1954, 1.

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