Song Binbin's 宋彬彬 apology (daoqian 道歉) for her involvement in the events that took place at the Girls' Middle School of Beijing Normal University (today known as the Experimental Middle School, Beijing shifan daxue fushu shiyan zhongxue 北京师范大学附属实验中学) in August 1966 ignited a debate among participants of the Cultural Revolution which was somewhat unexpected. Rather than commending her for having the courage to face up to her own past, many commentators were critical of her apology. This paper examines the background, consequences and implications of Song Binbin's apology from a political science cum memory studies perspective. It analyses both Song Binbin's attempt to put forward her narrative on the death of Bian Zhongyun 卞仲耘, the-then vice-principal of the school, during a symposium held in January 2014 organized together with classmates from 1966 and entitled “Coming to terms with the Cultural Revolution and refusing to forget” (fansi wenge jujue yiwang 反思文革拒绝遗忘), and the debate sparked by her apology in the Chinese media.
Our discourse analysis focuses on comparing recent narratives on the memory of the Cultural Revolution with those from 2006. Additionally, we look at the political landscape in the People's Republic of China (PRC) today and its influence on the development of the official historiography of the Cultural Revolution. Our analysis is based on documentation from the symposium published in the electronic journal, Jiyi 记忆 (Remembrance), which, since 2010, has provided a platform for the exchange of information and discussion about Bian Zhongyun's death.Footnote 1 Reactions to Song's apology were published in a variety of formats, ranging from newspaper articles to blog entries. While both authors of this article have been following the debate on Song Binbin's involvement in the death of Bian Zhongyun for many years, neither has been directly involved in the recent or past developments related to this event. As non-participant observers, we rely solely on written sources for our analysis and have explicitly refrained from interviewing the discourse participants introduced below. This makes our contribution different from the many publications in Chinese and English written by authors involved in the event.Footnote 2 In contrast to these publications, we focus on the political implications and see the debate surrounding Song Binbin's apology as an important battleground for the power struggle between at least two groups in the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and in society: those who rely on social as well as economic capital accumulated prior to the Xi Jinping 习近平 administration, and those who see themselves as left behind by the politics of reform and opening.
In comparison to the debates on the Cultural Revolution held before and during the 20th anniversary in 2006, the so-called Maoist rebel faction has been extremely active in recent times and intent on trying to pose a counter-narrative to the position of “totally negating the Cultural Revolution” (quanpan fouding wenhua da geming 全盘否定文化大革命) advanced by the 1981 “Resolution on some questions concerning the history of the CCP since the founding of the People's Republic of China” (Guanyu jianguo yilai dang de ruogan lishi wenti de jueyi 关于建国以来党的若干历史问题的决议). According to the rebel faction, Deng Xiaoping 邓小平 and Liu Shaoqi 刘少奇 are to blame for the excessive violence of 1966 and Mao's overall strategy was correct. Xi Jinping's new interpretation of post-1949 history, offered under the motto of “the two thirty years should not negate each other” (liang ge sanshi nian bu neng xianghu fouding 两个三十年不能相互否定), demonstrates that the rebel faction's arguments are not totally out of line with the current orthodoxy.Footnote 3
What Happened on 5 August 1966?
Song Binbin in fact first made a public apology in as early as 2010 for her role in the events in August 1966 that led to the death of Bian Zhongyun. However, her apology at that time largely went unnoticed.Footnote 4 In 2014, she declared that she had nothing to add to the version of events she gave in her 2010 statement.Footnote 5 In this version, she described how the so-called work team had started mobilizing students to criticize Bian Zhongyun and others for their revisionist standpoints already in late June 1966. It was in this context that Bian was accused of being a “false Party member” (jia dangyuan 假党员), which made everybody highly agitated and angry with her.Footnote 6 In addition, someone from outside the school who had a history of confrontation with Bian Zhongyun aired her grievances and attacked Bian physically. This is when several people started to beat up members of the school's leadership. In response, two teachers along with Song Binbin and her classmate Liu Jin 刘进 were asked to discuss the issue with Deng Xiaoping, whose daughters were enrolled in the Girls' Middle School of Beijing Normal University and who was to supervise the work team (gongzuozu 工作组) at this school. However, soon afterwards, the work team had to leave the school, which is why neither the leadership of the school nor anyone else had the authority to control the situation. In fact, those who had cooperated with the work team, such as Song Binbin, were regarded as “conservative” (baoshou 保守) and had lost their authority.Footnote 7 According to Song:
On 5 August, those serious events took place as a consequence of violent activities in school, which eventually led to the death of Vice-principal Bian. At first, I did not know that the leadership of the school was going to be paraded through the campus; it was only later that I learned that some schoolmates from the first grade of the upper division had started this. That afternoon, Liu Jin and I sat together with some other classmates in the office occupied by the work team on the second floor of the East Building to discuss what to do next. Suddenly, some students from the lower division ran in to tell us that students were beating up people on the sports ground. Liu Jin, myself and some other classmates who had been on the students' representatives committee and in the core group ran to the sports ground and saw how Vice-principal Bian and five others from the school's leadership were forced to present themselves … We tried to convince them [i.e. the fellow students] that they should not beat up people, but they … could not see any wrong in making them march in the streets … We made the people leave the scene and went back to the second floor of the East Building. Later on, schoolmates from lower grades came and told us that the beatings were still going on behind the sports ground. Liu Jin and I went to have a look and saw many schoolmates gathering behind the sports ground with members of the school's leadership forced to carry soil in baskets which were so full and heavy that they could not move. They were beaten and scolded for that. Liu Jin and I advised the schoolmates who were supervising the school's leadership that to work means to work and cannot be accompanied by beating up people. With the baskets as big as they were, they could not be blamed for not being able to carry them. As we saw that they did not object, we left the scene … On the evening of 5 August, I heard the rumour that Vice-principal Bian was lying on the sports ground just about to die. Liu Jin and I ran immediately to the sports ground. Teacher Li Songwen was also there. Liu Jin asked a worker on campus to open the backdoor, and we [took] Principal Bian into the Postal Hospital.Footnote 8
Whose Story Is This?
Bian Zhongyun's death, along with the involvement of the students from the Girls' Middle School of Beijing Normal University, has been a topic of internal review and public discussion since the end of the 1990s. Liu Jin, one of the leading student cadres in the school in 1966, reports that she attended the memorial service for Bian Zhongyun in 1978 and that, in the early 1990s, she went back to her former middle school to look for archival materials. She talked to her former teachers but did not find the time to write things down before she went into retirement.Footnote 9 Feng Jinglan 冯敬兰, one of the organizers of the aforementioned symposium, claims that she had begun to work on this issue in 1996, and in 2000 wrote down her recollections of the incident.Footnote 10 Ye Weili 叶维丽 reports that she began her research into the death of Bian Zhongyun in 2000/2001.Footnote 11 After meeting up with Liu Jin in 2002, they both decided to commit time and energy to the project and began to get in touch with others who may have witnessed Bian's death.
Some people started even earlier, among them another former vice-principal of the school, Hu Zhitao 胡志涛, who wrote about the incident in quite some detail in a text entitled “In remembrance of 5 August,” which was published in 1986.Footnote 12 Wang Youqin 王友琴, who also happened to have been a student at this particular school, started researching Bian's death in the 1990s and wrote at great length about it in her book, Victims of the Cultural Revolution, published in 2004.Footnote 13 Carma Hinton and Geremie Barmé made a documentary on Red Guard memories of the Cultural Revolution, with many hours of film footage in which both Ye Weili and Song Binbin appear – without once referring to Bian's death, however.Footnote 14 In 2006, Hu Jie 胡杰 made a 70-minute documentary on Bian with the title, Though I Am Gone, with Bian's husband, Wang Jingyao 王晶垚, as his main informant.Footnote 15
From these publications and documentaries, it can be seen that the former schoolmates, all belonging to the so-called lao san jie 老三届 generation, were “comrades in arms” at the time of the Cultural Revolution.Footnote 16 They had lost touch after the events of 1966, it seems, and re-established their relationships in the early to mid-1990s. It took them nearly 30 years to recover their friendships and form a “carrier group” of Cultural Revolution memory.Footnote 17 Carrier groups are formed from among “insiders” sharing similar, and in this case traumatic, experiences as victims or perpetrators. They exchange memories among themselves and refrain from communicating with “outsiders” while developing their own narrative of the past. Soldiers share their memories of war in carrier groups, and participants of the Cultural Revolution preserve their fragmented memory by communicating with their friends from that time. They claim that only people who experienced the traumatic events with them can understand what happened. Because this form of coming to terms with the past is not public, outside observers gain the impression that the Cultural Revolution is forgotten. Instead, different carrier groups develop their own respective narratives, which often differ sharply from the official version given in the 1981 Party Resolution.Footnote 18
The participants of the 2014 symposium have formed a carrier group of Cultural Revolution memory and have also defined the rules of inclusion and exclusion. In their recent statements, they all give their affiliations with different grades of the upper division of the middle school and explain their family background as belonging to the upper, but not the highest, level of central cadre families in Beijing. This shows that social background and belonging to the same grade in school are two important criteria for membership in this carrier group. That is why Wang Youqin does not belong to the group. She does not fulfil the “objective criteria,” as she is younger and of a different family background (she comes from a family of teachers). In addition, the carrier group does not allow for any member to be called perpetrator; instead, they explicitly define themselves as more or less “responsible actors.” However, Wang Youqin does not accept this definition and instead has accused Song Binbin of having actively participated in the beating which eventually led to the death of Bian Zhongyun.Footnote 19 Since Song Binbin's 2012 apology, many people who used to believe Wang Youqin's story are now convinced by Song Binbin's narrative;Footnote 20 however, Wang Youqin still refuses to accept Song Binbin's version.Footnote 21 This shows that Wang is not part of the consensus formed by the carrier group and therefore cannot join them.
Bian Zhongyun's husband, Wang Jingyao, is also not a member of the carrier group. One of the reasons why this event has garnered so much attention is because Wang, as he explains in Hu Jie's film,Footnote 22 refused to forget and began to gather as much evidence as he could as soon as he was informed of his wife's death on the evening of 5 August 1966. Although some members of the carrier group have had contact with the now 94-year-old Wang Jingyao, he and his family were not present at the official apology ceremony in front of a statue of Bian Zhongyun erected at the Experimental Middle School in Beijing.Footnote 23 How was this possible? Wang has, to the best of our knowledge, never claimed that Song Binbin actively participated in what he terms the murder of his wife. Instead, he tried to take another person to court, someone who he believes mobilized the students against his wife, but his request for a trial was turned down in the 1980s on account of the time elapsed. So, how could it be that the apology was not addressed to him, as one might expect? This is because Wang Jingyao does not comply with the rules of the carrier group, which insist that no member of the carrier group can be accused of being the perpetrator and no one must disclose who the perpetrator was. Wang Jingyao, on the other hand, insists that the perpetrator should reveal herself or else be exposed by others. As this demand cannot be complied with, he cannot, and maybe does not even want to, be included in the group. Moreover, Wang Jingyao insists that Mao Zedong should be squarely condemned for his “mistakes” which made possible the outburst of violence in the second half of 1966. Song Binbin's apology at no point referred to Mao's role in the events, and so Wang refuses to accept her explanation and is unconvinced by the narrative accepted by those who participated in the symposium.Footnote 24
There are quite a number of former schoolmates from 1966 who do not form part of the carrier group. Most prominent among them are the daughters of Liu Shaoqi and Deng Xiaoping. Both attended the school at the time and have on occasion been publicly accused of having taken an active part in the beating of Bian Zhongyun.Footnote 25 The sister of Bo Xilai 薄熙来 also belongs to this group.Footnote 26 The simplest explanation for this is their family background: they all come from families whose political and social position was even higher than those in the carrier group. However, the reason why they stick to their code of silence is more complicated. It relates to an aspect of the Cultural Revolution which has so far never been publicly addressed in the PRC: the participation of the sons and daughters of the leadership of the CCP back in 1966, and their relationship to their parents at that time. Although it is clear that the so-called Old Red Guards (lao hong weibing 老红卫兵) were heavily involved, no one has so far taken responsibility for the outburst of violence during the initial phase of the Cultural Revolution. Instead, the 1981 Party Resolution refrains from assessing this period and from condemning the Old Red Guards.Footnote 27 Recently published materials show that in as early as 1979, the involvement of this group was under investigation when Peng Xiaomeng 彭小蒙, a former leading Red Guard at the middle school affiliated to Peking University, allegedly wrote a letter to Hu Yaobang 胡耀邦 concerning this issue.Footnote 28 Hu Yaobang responded by saying that many young people had committed mistakes during their time as a Red Guard, but most of them lacked experience and were used or misled. That is why they should not be condemned but instead be helped to overcome their mistakes.Footnote 29 The silence of the 1981 Resolution on this question is in line with Hu Yaobang's response, but failed to calm the fears of the former Old Red Guards. In 1984, Red Guard activism was again under review, with many Old Red Guards eager to draw a clear line between themselves and the so-called rebels (zaofanpai 造反派). In another letter, this time to Chen Yun 陈云, the group underlined the necessity to abstain from persecuting Old Red Guards who had committed mistakes; instead, their positive participation in the early phase of the Cultural Revolution should be acknowledged and they should be mobilized to participate in the continuing struggle against the “three kinds of people.”Footnote 30
Since the early 2000s, the death of Bian Zhongyun has grown into an issue of emblematic function for the assessment of Red Guard activism in 1966. That is why, after more than 20 years of research and discussion, we still do not know for sure who killed Bian Zhongyun. Song Binbin and all other members of the carrier group see themselves as non-participants in the beating; however, they are also not prepared to reveal the names of those who did take part, as they are all part of a larger carrier group consisting of those Old Red Guards who regard themselves as being “used or misled” during the early phase of the Cultural Revolution. Because they do not want to run the risk of being expelled from this carrier group, they stick to the rules – even if this means that they themselves remain under suspicion.
In Search of Truth and Reconciliation
The carrier group from the Girls' Middle School set as its major task the search for the truth about the death of Bian Zhongyun. Liu Jin admits that she was the first to write a big character poster (dazibao 大字报) criticizing the so-called work team. Like many others at the time, she criticized the work team for being too rigorous in exerting its leadership over the movement and demanded instead that students should be encouraged to liberate themselves. This big character poster, as Liu Jin states today, was responsible for creating an uncontrollable situation on campus and one of the reasons for the outburst of violence. She has, in fact, been doing research on the 5 August event for a long time, undergoing several rounds of inspection related to the case and writing up documentation for the school's archives. Her contribution is remarkable because of the rigorous attitude she has taken with regards to herself and her contribution to the events, and her convincing attempt to uncover the reasons for her behaviour back in 1966.Footnote 31
In contrast, Ye Weili presents herself as a researcher: “I am a historian as well as one of the students at the Girls' Middle School back then. This means that I cannot stand above or outside [of the events] while trying to find an answer to the question ‘whose responsibility’ [has to be taken into account] in the context of Principal Bian's death … but that I have to put myself right into this … and shoulder the most horrible collective shame that the Girls' Middle School has accumulated in its history.”Footnote 32 While Liu Jin mostly looks at her deep-seated, internal motivations, Ye Weili focuses on external pressures and comes to the overall conclusion that the violence of those days was very much owing to the total loss of control of the authorities at all levels of the political system.
Li Hongyun 李红云 represents yet another approach to the death of Bian Zhongyun. In Jiyi, she explains that she only became aware of the controversy when the school was commemorating its 90th anniversary in 2007 and some people suggested erecting a statue for Bian Zhongyun on campus.Footnote 33 “I am in law, and clarifying the truth about things is the first step before you can make any assessment in a case. As a graduate of the Girls' Middle School and belonging to the generation which personally experienced the Cultural Revolution, I feel that I have a duty to clarify this event.”Footnote 34 Li Hongyun explicitly refers to the situation in South Africa, underlining that the ultimate goal of coming to terms with the past is reconciliation: “If countries like South Africa, Sierra Leone and Rwanda can achieve reconciliation and mercy in their attitude towards the past, why should a country with thousands of years of civilization and tradition like China not do the same?”Footnote 35
Song Binbin presents herself as both a leader of the students at the Girls' Middle school and a victim of the political situation during the Cultural Revolution. She begins her contribution to the 2014 symposium by stating: “Since about 40 years ago there have been two Song Binbins: one Song Binbin who from the very beginning argued against armed struggle, violence and ‘the theory of descent,’ a Song Binbin who can take responsibility for whatever she did. The other Song Binbin is a creation under the name of ‘Song Yaowu’ 宋要武 [Song who wants violence], she was fabricated during the Cultural Revolution and the 1990s.”Footnote 36 In Carma Hinton's film, Song is more forthcoming as she explains that it was Mao Zedong who took her identity away from her by bestowing a new name on her. This name was then used in order to mobilize young people in Mao's struggle against Deng Xiaoping and Liu Shaoqi, as she contends, without her consent. All of this happened because, as Liu Jin states, Song Binbin was chosen by Liu Jin to represent the Girls' Middle School during the mass meeting on Tian'anmen Square on 18 August 1966.Footnote 37 It was during this meeting that Song Binbin was given the opportunity to place a Red Guard armband on Mao's jacket sleeve: “that Chairman Mao wore the armband of the Red Guards, together with the phrase ‘how about some violence’ (yao wu ma 要武嘛), ignited some kind of madness to protect the great leader of the country … Together with everyone and every family I want to denounce all violence which took place because of ‘Song Yaowu’ and other reasons.”Footnote 38 But, her role as a victim of the Cultural Revolution has yet another side to it. Later on in her presentation, she talks about her father being labelled as a “capitalist roader” in 1967, her mother and brother being paraded in the streets of Shenyang, and how she herself was kept in isolation.Footnote 39 This experience was very typical for Red Guards with her family background. It is why her self-perception as a victim of the Cultural Revolution dominates the narrative of her apology and makes it less convincing.
Looking at the documents published by Jiyi, one can gain a good understanding of the enormous efforts the members of the carrier group have made since the 1990s in coming to terms with the death of Bian Zhongyun. Their courage to confront this event publicly is admirable. Alas, while all of them concentrated on defining their own role in the event and unanimously came to the conclusion that none among them was directly involved in the beating, they have not had the courage to present the names of those who were directly involved. This, of course, leaves the victims as well as the interested public unsatisfied and doubtful, as it is clear that there is something to this case everybody knows but nobody dares to address.
This is exactly the reason why Bian's husband, Wang Jingyao, condemns what he deems “a false apology”: “As long as the full truth about the ‘5 August event’ is not out there, I will definitely not accept the false apology given by Red Guards from the Girls' School of Beijing Normal University.”Footnote 40 However, the reason why this truth has not fully come out is not because the perpetrator is among them; instead, we would argue that it is precisely because no member of the carrier group was directly involved that they can do the research and go public. Only with the carrier group remaining as active and diligent as they are can the group of direct participants stay silent.
The question arises why Song Binbin and her classmates decided to present their public apology at this particular moment. Some of the reasons seem quite obvious. All of those who were at the centre of events have retired. Both psychologically and from the point of view of practicability, it is easier to confront one's own past in a situation where one is able to choose one's own social contacts. The risk of being met with mistrust, criticism or unfriendly behaviour at work or in one's professional life is no longer there. Other reasons are less obvious and relate to the political climate in the PRC. As economic growth slows down, the initiators of the opening and reform policy are afraid of losing momentum while a counter-narrative is in the making which is critical of the reform and of the role the reformers played during the second half of 1966. The offspring of the reformers, such as Song Binbin, try to be proactive in presenting their version of events during the early phase of the Cultural Revolution.
A Counter-narrative in the Making
Until recently, Old Red Guards were regarded as having committed mistakes, which, however, did not prevent them from going on to forge a political career in China. In contrast, those who were said to have belonged to the so-called “three kinds of people” were expelled from the system during the Cultural Revolution and hardly ever found their way back. These people now recognize that Song Binbin has provided them with the opportunity to use the obvious flaws in her apology to present their own version of the Cultural Revolution.
This seems to be the reason why on 13 January 2014, when the debate on Song Binbin's apology was first ignited, the Internet Information Bureau of the State Council of the PRC (guowuyuan hulianwang xinxi bangongshi 国务院互联网信息办公室) issued a directive saying: “Because the mood on the net is complicated, all websites should hold reports on the apology of Song Renqiong's 宋任穷 daughter Song Binbin at a low temperature, [which implies] that reports on this issue should be erased from the front page and connecting links on this issue should not be presented.”Footnote 41 While this directive was meant to bring the discussion to a sudden end, Nanfang zhoumo 南方周末 (Southern Weekly) continued to publish articles on the issue. The editor-in-chief consequently had to write a report and accept that the newspaper was no longer allowed to publish articles on Song Binbin's apology.Footnote 42 However, both the Chinese and non-Chinese language press outside of the PRC continued to discuss the issue, and blog entries were posted in the internet.
The verdict on the Old Red Guards can be construed from the absence of any verdict on their activism during the early phase of the Cultural Revolution in the 1981 Party Resolution.Footnote 43 In contrast to what one might assume from reading blog entries posted by the Maoist faction, there is also no straightforward verdict on the rebel factions included in the 1981 Resolution. One of the Resolution's main aims was to prevent the continuation of factional struggles and so it omitted to include a verdict on either the Old Red Guards or the rebels.Footnote 44 However, we can see from the reactions to Song Binbin's apology that the rebels from among the “three kinds of people” are now attempting to overturn what they perceive as the implicit verdict of the Resolution. In one blog entry by Li Yang 黎阳, a commentator well known for his affiliation with the Maoist faction, Li criticizes Song Binbin's apology for providing everybody who did similar things during the Cultural Revolution with the opportunity to absolve themselves of their responsibility by simply apologizing. This ritual implies the possibility that people not only ask for apologies by other individuals but want, as Xu Youyu 徐友渔 supposedly claims, the state to take on collective responsibility and forward an apology to every victim of the Cultural Revolution. Li Yang contends that under these conditions, it could be argued that the state is “a criminal organization.” Song Binbin's apology – according to Li Yang – might help her personally and as an individual, but it threatens the stability of the state and is therefore dangerous.Footnote 45
Another entry in a blog explains:
Even if Bian Zhongyun was really harmed by extreme brutality, this should not be counted as something related to Mao Zedong. This is because Mao launched the Cultural Revolution with the aim of mobilizing bottom-up against bureaucrats and the capitalist roaders inside the Party. Who would have guessed that some people from the upper levels would use this opportunity to change the mode of struggle into a top-down mobilization under the leadership of the bureaucrats? They changed the object of the struggle from the bureaucrats to the students, the teachers and workers at the first front of production … and thus destroyed Mao's strategic orientation for the Cultural Revolution.Footnote 46
According to this narrative, what happened to Bian was not part of Mao's strategic plan but rather belongs to an anti-Cultural Revolution strategy invented by those Mao wanted to expel.
In January 2014, another blogger comes to the conclusion that:
It is now time to reverse the verdict on the Cultural Revolution because only a positive assessment of the Cultural Revolution can be the basis of a positive assessment of Mao and the 30 years under his leadership. I see that some of those who offer apologies for the Cultural Revolution have ulterior motives. One of their aims is to stick to the total negation of the Cultural Revolution. Thus, the parent generation of Chen Xiaolu 陈小鲁Footnote 47 and Song Binbin who made enormous contributions to the founding of the People's Republic can forever be regarded as victims and the embodiment of the truth, their parents will forever have been correct, and Mao Zedong will forever have been mistaken. The masses of the people will never again have the opportunity to challenge the bureaucratic class which acts against the principles of communism, while those bureaucrats who misuse their power for their own interest or who have degenerated can sit back and relax in peace and happiness.Footnote 48
The negation of the Cultural Revolution, driven by the 1981 Resolution, implies total disempowerment for the masses.
In yet another blog entry, the author argues against the 1981 Party Resolution. According to this author's interpretation, the Red Guards were ordered by their parents to destroy the Cultural Revolution before it ever got started. They acted on behalf of the class of leading families who wanted chaos to break out in the hope that this would prevent the Cultural Revolution from fanning out across the whole country. However, once the Cultural Revolution group brought this to a halt, the offspring of the leading bureaucrats had to break publicly from their parents.Footnote 49 From a family point of view, the Old Red Guards see themselves as victims of the Cultural Revolution, yet from an individual point of view, they see themselves as victims of Mao Zedong. The Maoist bloggers, however, argue that they were persecuted by “the bureaucrats.” When the movement to clarify the ranks of the “three kinds of people” was launched, those among the rebels who had taken over leading positions at the lower levels of the state were interrogated, degraded and sometimes even sent to prison. After the Cultural Revolution, many of them were never given the chance to take up important political or bureaucratic positions. Both Old Red Guards and rebels, while commonly regarded as perpetrators, insist on being victims.
This new discourse strategy is radically different to the situation in and around 2006. At that time, the debate excluded those victims who were maltreated, murdered or driven to suicide, and victim status was seen as something negative.Footnote 50 Now, ten years later, both the Old Red Guards and the Maoist rebels seem to regard their status as victims of the Cultural Revolution as social capital which they can use in their struggle for satisfaction, impact and power. However, in a continuation of the tone of the 1981 Resolution, they do not express any empathy for the dead victims.
The Maoist rebels see the Cultural Revolution as the antithesis of all that is happening in China today: workers and peasants were “the masters of the country” (dang jia zuo zhu 当家做主) instead of being threatened by unemployment and the loss of their land. This argument is often put forward by members of the Maoist faction who were too young to have actively participated in the Cultural Revolution; they were primary school children at the time and often not aware of the details of what happened back then. In 2005/2006, they criticized the reform and opening up policy by juxtaposing the situation in China today with life during the Cultural Revolution.Footnote 51 The Maoist faction among the rebels seems to have aligned with this younger group of Cultural Revolution participants and, as a result, they have formed a much more prominent force in the discourse.Footnote 52
The Changing Orthodoxy of the CCP Historiography
The 1981 Resolution constructed “universal complicity” with the aim of pacifying the tension between different factions, the perpetrators and victims, the winners and losers, of the Cultural Revolution. However, the notion of “universal complicity” was not accepted by those who had experienced the Cultural Revolution and, as a result, the Resolution was contested as soon as it was passed. Another reason why it failed to establish itself as the dominant text in the discourse on the Cultural Revolution is because for some the Resolution was not pronounced enough in “negating” (fouding 否定) the Cultural Revolution; for others it went too far. As a result, the CCP has tried to block public discussion of the Cultural Revolution, albeit with little success.Footnote 53
The new slogan promoted by Xi Jinping about the “two 30 years” is meant to balance the relationship between the “first 30 years” and the last 30 years of reform and opening.Footnote 54 As such, Party historiography can find positive aspects of the Cultural Revolution just as it can describe negative aspects of the period since 1978. The overall aim is to come to a positive assessment of 100 years of CCP history in 2021 as well as 100 years of PRC history in 2049. So far, Party historiography has basically underlined Mao's positive role in CCP history; however, as a consequence of Mao's antagonists taking control at the end of the Cultural Revolution, Party historiography also has to criticize Mao in order to make the policy of reform and opening plausible in the context of CCP history. The more arguments began to circulate stressing that the consequence of reform and opening was exactly what Mao had warned against when he talked about “restoration,” the more the policy of reform and opening had to be supported by criticism of Mao Zedong.Footnote 55 The recent discussions on the Cultural Revolution demonstrate that the Maoist faction among the rebels wants to push Party historiography into a more positive assessment of Mao while reinforcing their fight against social injustice, bureaucracy and corruption.
The question arises why Party historiography needs to respond to the demands of the Maoist faction. As is well documented, Xi Jinping was elected as the leader of the Chinese Communist Party after one of his most important rivals, Bo Xilai, was sentenced to life in prison. Although everybody refers to Bo Xilai's policies in Chongqing as being nostalgic of Maoist times, very little analysis has so far been offered of how these policies were connected to the Cultural Revolution. That there is more to Bo Xilai's relationship with the Cultural Revolution was first pronounced by the-then premier Wen Jiabao 温家宝 at a press conference in 2012 following the meetings of the National People's Congress and the People's Consultative Congress.Footnote 56 But, as Xu Youyu points out, already before then there were rumours afloat that the so-called “Chongqing model” (Chongqing moshi 重庆模式) owed much to the Cultural Revolution.Footnote 57 Indeed, it can be argued that the Chongqing model shared much with the Cultural Revolution in its ability to mobilize people. As the channels of participation have not changed since the end of the Cultural Revolution, Xu Youyu argues, it is perhaps inevitable that people remember the model of the Cultural Revolution as a means of instigating change in instances of mass dissatisfaction.Footnote 58 Interestingly, this is true both for national leaders such as Wen Jiabao who were obviously highly agitated by the thought of a reoccurrence of the Cultural Revolution, and for the led masses who followed Bo Xilai for a certain period of time. Xu writes:
The Chongqing model awakens our attention to [the fact] that the Cultural Revolution is not a nightmare which we all have forgotten long ago. It is a real danger right in front of our eyes. It is not the catastrophe propagated as set in stone, but an event which quite a number of people regard as a big festival and the political instrument [with which] to achieve equity in social reality … The reality we have to confront is: the Cultural Revolution was supported by millions of people. They participated in this political movement with sincerity and enthusiasm. If we want to understand why there are so many today who call for a cultural revolution, we have to understand what reason they had back then to throw themselves into the Cultural Revolution.Footnote 59
If Xu Youyu's analysis is right, the present leadership of the CCP has to confront a dilemma: Bo Xilai and the Cultural Revolution enjoyed considerable support in China, but the current leadership expelled Bo Xilai from the elite ranks in order to install Xi Jinping. The leadership cannot allow for any signs of open support for Bo Xilai, which is why they feel compelled to give space to more and more positive memories of the Cultural Revolution instead. It is also why we can now observe that it is more difficult in China to offer apologies for violence in the early stage of the Cultural Revolution than it is to overturn the official opinion of the Cultural Revolution as given by the 1981 Resolution. As for Party historiography, the need to accommodate the arguments from those who demand a positive assessment of the Cultural Revolution is, under these conditions, more urgent than the need to respond to those intellectuals and their families who were murdered or seriously injured during those turbulent times.
Conclusion
According to the analysis presented above, the memory of the Cultural Revolution has again turned into a battlefield of conflicting carrier groups. While members of the Old Red Guards tried to avoid losing momentum by proactively proffering their apologies, the Maoist faction among the rebels identified a window of opportunity through which they could attempt to reverse the CCP verdict on the Cultural Revolution and overcome the negative image they have borne for so many years.
The discourse on Song Binbin's apology shows that perceptions of social justice, of what is politically right and wrong, and of dreams for the future are still shaped by ideas propagated during Maoist times, especially during the Cultural Revolution. The more the present situation is regarded as unsatisfactory, the more the Cultural Revolution emerges from the discourse as a possible and feasible alternative. Paradoxically, this is true despite the fact that all discourse participants claim to be victims. The factional divide responsible for much of the violence during the Cultural Revolution still exists to the degree that the participants are not yet ready for reconciliation. The victims have little empathy for each other and are still competing with each other for recognition and power. In this sense, the Cultural Revolution is still going on.
The attempts of the CCP to ban public discussions of the Cultural Revolution have had a limited effect. Although it is still impossible to dispute the 1981 Resolution openly, internet blogs are used to create a counter-narrative, which is much more pronounced than ten years ago in laying the blame for the violence that occurred in 1966 at the feet of those responsible for the policy of reform and opening after 1978. Against the background of growing criticism of the social injustice in China and the slowing down of economic growth, the Cultural Revolution emerges as an alternative to a market economy. At the same time, those who were targeted as “the objects” of criticism back then are now made responsible for the emerging social dissatisfaction. In order to avoid being downgraded again, Song Binbin and other Red Guards have to erase the stain seeping from rumours that they were actively involved in acts of murder. They either deny direct involvement, as Song Binbin did, or they claim moral superiority by openly admitting their involvement, as Chen Xiaolu did.Footnote 60 In both cases, they did not receive the expected response. Song Binbin's apology represents an abortive attempt at preserving the positive image of leading cadres and their families based on their victimhood during the Cultural Revolution.
Biographical notes
Susanne Weigelin-Schwiedrzik is professor of Sinology at the department for East Asian studies at the University of Vienna, Austria.
Cui Jinke is a doctoral student of Sinology at the University of Vienna, Austria.