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The Anti-Rightist Campaign (simplified Chinese: 反右运动; traditional Chinese: 反右運動; pinyin: Fǎnyòu Yùndòng) in the People's Republic of China, which lasted from 1957 to roughly 1959, was a political campaign to purge alleged "Rightists" within the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and the country as a whole.
Anti-Rightest Movement in China, following Mao’s Hundred Flowers Campaign in 1957. Photo: Wikipedia. In February 1957, Chairman Mao Zedong rose to speak to a packed session of China’s...
The Anti-“Rightist” Movement was a two year period in China (1957-1959) where the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) reeducated, humiliated, imprisoned, and executed those who were counter-revolutionaries. Many of the "rightists" in this movement were “early advocates of free-market reforms” and also many were chosen based off of ...
The Hundred Flowers gave way to a new purge called the Anti-Rightist movement, initiated in the summer of 1957. Between 300,000 and 550,000 individuals were identified as Rightists, most of them intellectuals, academics, writers and artists.
12 Ιαν 2023 · It deals with spaces of history and memory, in particular in relation to the Anti-Rightist Campaign of 1957–59. It highlights Wang’s interest in unveiling the gaps and the contradictions imbued in state narratives at different epochs.
30 Απρ 2021 · Using a case study of the Hundred Flowers and Anti-Rightist campaigns of 1956–58, I examine the reception of such propaganda with a focus on silence, sound, and voice and their affective qualities.
the leading rightist in the art world in 1957, was accused of opposing the Com- munist Party by his refusal to support guohua, traditional Chinese painting (Laing 1988:28-29).