Showing posts with label China. Show all posts
Showing posts with label China. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

"The jaunty nipples of collectivism"

Yesterday, I took a look at Kim Jong-Il's insane plan to use kidnapping to improve North Korea's dismal propaganda movie industry. If you've ever wondered why any dictator would think anyone would sit through a three hour long socialist parable featuring a cheap Godzilla knock off, you're not alone. Pulgasari: Legendary Monster obviously represents the low end of the communist propaganda arts spectrum, but that's not to say that The Party didn't occasionally dabble in more substantial fare.

The late Chinese dictator, Mao Zedong, declared that art becomes useless unless it has become wedded to politics, and that politics, naturally, are useless unless they are in the service "of the people". Art for art's sake? That, my friends, is decadent, and bourgeois! After the revolution, everything becomes political, don't you know?

Looking back, perhaps The Chairman didn't understand that "the people", broadly speaking, were not inclined to confuse political propaganda with art. The well known notion that the arts tend to slip away from ideological yokes when given half a chance also appears to have been ignored. Still, just as Kim Jong-Il couldn't wait to try his hand at the movies, Mao Zedong couldn't wait to tamper with his particular favorite art form: Chinese opera.

And so, courtesy of Jim Lileks, an analysis of the Maoist opera masterpiece "The Red Detachment of Women".

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Mao: The Movie!

Idi Amin Dada had his moment in the Hollywood sun with The Last King of Scotland, prompting me to ask: where are the rest of the dictator movies?

Well, Robert De Niro of all people has heard my plea, and will be making a movie about the late Chinese dictator Mao Zedong. De Niro has managed to secure the film rights to Roy Rowan's book Chasing the Dragon: A Veteran Journalist's Firsthand Account of the 1949 Chinese Revolution. Presumably, De Niro will be shortening the title to Chasing the Dragon, because, you know, it's impossible for Americans to write books or make movies about China without the words like jade, pearl or dragon in the title.

There's no word yet on how the film intends to frame Mao's bloody war with Chiang Kai-Shek, or the bloody chaos that ensued after the Communist victory. Because the book focuses on the Revolution, it seems to be a safe bet that we're going to be shown Magnanimous Mao, hero of the Agrarian Dispossessed, Enemy of Japanese Fascism, and so on and so forth. Hey, beggars can't be choosers, and I'll take a defanged Mao movie over none at all. But if anyone's listening, it's time to deliver the goods on a Mao movie we can sink our teeth into. Has anyone ever made a movie about the Great Leap Forward? How about a Scorcese style treatment of the Cultural Revolution? They could call it Redfellas!

Friday, June 15, 2007

Forgetting to remember? Remembering to forget?

OK, OK - I know what I said yesterday. I really hadn't intended to spend most of the week at Dictators of the World going on and on about communism, Sometimes, however, that's just the way it turns out. So it's fitting that on the day I wrote about history's "killing joke" and took a moment to ponder communism's earth shattering body count, a monument was dedicated in Washington DC to the victims of the world's bloodiest political ideology.

President Bush was on hand to dedicate the Victims of Communism memorial in a small park between Massachusetts and New Jersey Avenues in Washington, but in an age where the president of the United States can't even take a leak without at least 300 reporters following him around, this event received fairly minimal notice. The memorial itself was created in 1993 by an act of congress which sought to dedicate some sort of memorial to the more than 100,000,000 people who died as a result of communist oppression, slavery, mass murder and genocide. In typically bureaucratic Washington fashion, the most memorial was finally finished a mere 14 years later. Depressingly, that long since nearly everyone in America had stopped caring, and long enough to realize that kids today probably won't be learning much about it in schools.

Right on cue, China denounced the memorial, saying that it "[provoked] conflicts between different ideologies and social systems". China, of course, may have simply been somewhat embarrassed. In the truly epic body count caused of communism, somewhere between 20 to 30 million people starved to death - the worst famine in world history - during Mao Zedong's disastrous Great Leap Forward. It's a predictable denunciation. After all, a communist party - even if it's communist in name only - still runs the show in China, so it stands to reason that their culpability in the senseless deaths of so many dozens of millions makes them just a bit uncomfortable. It probably also doesn't help that the memorial statue itself looks like a certain statue that featured prominently in the 1989 Tianamen Square demonstrations.

America's memorial, however good the intentions were in building it, feels a day late and a dollar short. A number of countries in the former Soviet bloc have built their own memorials to the victims of communism that evoke something ours cannot - the horror of familiarity. It's a good bet that schoolkids in Prague and Warsaw will not be forgetting the lessons of communist rule because their parents' generation won't allow it to happen. In fact, making sure our own kids learned the history of communism's deadly legacy would be worth more than a hundred of these memorials, and better still, would make the memorial itself irrelevant in practical terms.

The sad fact of the matter is, as long as the system's apologists continue to be so robustly overrepresented in academia, the arts and even in governments around the world, the victims of communism will never really be at rest. Who cares about a memorial when the horror it remembers is not only still alive, but even remembered fondly?

UPDATE: Michael Weiss writes a stellar piece blasting the "faux-cialist" movement over on Jewcy.

Friday, June 08, 2007

Gender bent

Say hello to Chen Yan, a 51 year old woman from Mianyang, China determined to earn a living impersonating the late Mao Zedong. Apparently, she's already "invested" in the hairdo and and gray jacket, so I suppose she's just waiting for someone to offer her a role as Mao in a television show or movie. She certainly appears to be startling the hell out of the girl behind her in this picture.

Now I'm just waiting for some middle aged Georgian woman to impersonate Josef Stalin, complete with bushy mustache.

Monday, May 14, 2007

Mao's burning up

Is nothing sacred in China any longer? Police in Beijing have arrested a man accused of setting fire to the enormous of portrait of the late Mao Zedong hanging in the Forbidden City.

Even though China has officially distanced itself somewhat from Mao (who has the highest body count of any single dictator in history), the "Great Helmsman" is still held in an official position of reverence, and the very idea that someone would try to burn the portrait is still considered fairly scandalous. In 1989, three men who were convicted of defacing the same portrait by throwing red paint on it served over 10 years of hard labor in prison. Can you imagine what fate awaits the would be arsonist? Just imagine what would happen if he were actually still alive!

More to the point, is Mao becoming increasingly irrelevant in the world's fastest growing capitalist economy? Does anyone besides rich American college students looking to piss off daddy or Nepalese rebels still hanker for Mao Zedong thought now that the Chinese themselves have moved on?

UPDATE: Mao Zedong is one of six dictators awaiting your vote for profiling on the Top 10 list. Don't delay, vote today, or the secret police will haul you away.

Sunday, March 25, 2007

Mao Zedong's last son dead at 84

Mao Anqing, the last remaining son of the late Chinese dictator Mao Zedong has died at age 84. According to biographers, Mao had intended to pass on leadership of China to Mao Anqing's elder brother, Mao Anying, before the elder son was killed during fighting in the Korean War.

The younger Mao, who suffered from a mental illness, was never considered to have a role in Mao's dynastic plans, and was shuffled to high ranking, if powerless, positions within the Chinese Communist Party throughout his entire life.

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Chinese propaganda posters

Do you have a deep seated desire to denounce the Gang of Four?

Do you have trouble remembering the Three Rules of Discipline and Eight Points of Attention?

Do you wish to let a hundred flowers bloom? A hundred schools of thought contend?

Have you performed a self-criticism for not studying Mao Zedong thought or learning from Comrade Lei Feng?

Are you worried that you might be an enemy of the party, a rightist revisionist or worse, a deviationist?

Worry no longer! Stefan Landsberger's stunning web collection of Chinese Communist Party propaganda posters has you covered, featuring hundreds of Chinese propaganda posters covering every era of modern Chinese history from Mao Zedong's takeover to the Beijing 2008 Olympics. Do yourself a favor, and check them out right here.