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Tan Lifu: A “Reactionary” Red Guard in Historical Perspective

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 January 2005

Abstract

Tan Lifu was a Red Guard leader whose August 1966 speech in defence of the Party's class line and his university's work team has long been considered key evidence for social interpretations of Red Guard factionalism. New documentation – including the complete transcript of the original speech – shows that Tan's case deviates sharply from the reputed profile of “conservative” students. Tan in fact espoused a version of the Party's class line that did not differ from the one advocated by those who denounced him; his “rebel” opponents at Beijing Industrial University were also organized and led by students from revolutionary cadre backgrounds; and Tan supported the (second) work team sent to his school because (unlike the first) it conducted a ferocious purge of a Party leadership against whom Tan harboured strong grievances. The case illustrates the ways that the politics of the work team period split students from similar backgrounds into opposing camps rather than sorting them into factions based on differences in family background.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© The China Quarterly, 2004

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Footnotes

An earlier version of this paper was presented at a conference at the University of California-San Diego, 8–9 June 2003. I would like to thank the participants in that conference for their suggestions, especially Joel Andreas, Joseph Esherick, Stanley Rosen, Yang Su and Xiaowei Zhang. As always, I am deeply indebted to Michael Schoenhals for his intense critical scrutiny of the manuscript and for generously sharing his unparalleled mastery of documentary sources from the period.