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  1. Coping with Crisis in the Wake of the Cultural Revolution: Rehistoricising Chinese Postsocialism.Yiching Wu - 2013 - Historical Materialism 21 (4):145-176.
    Over three decades after China ventured onto the market path, the Chinese state’s reform programme, which was intended to invigorate socialism, has instead led the country down a capitalist path. This paper situates China’s post-Mao transition in the context of the crisis of the party-state during the Cultural Revolution. Using Gramsci’s idea of ‘passive revolution’, it examines the state’s tactics of crisis management aiming to contain and neutralise emergent opposition and pressure from below. As the combined result of state repression, (...)
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  • Revolutionary China and Its Late-Capitalist Fate.Christopher Connery - 2015 - Historical Materialism 23 (2):257-286.
    This essay examines several works that contribute to an understanding of the nature of contemporary Chinese capitalism and its historical development. Core issues include the character of the bureaucracy, which has had a distinctive relationship to capital formation, and the character of the working class. The periodisation of Chinese capitalism and the relation between the pre- and post-reform periods are pressing political and analytical concerns. This essay suggests the advantages of a clearer focus on the dynamics of depoliticisation in understanding (...)
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  • The imperial systems in traditional china and japan: A comparative analysis of contrasting political philosophies and their contemporary significance.Stuart D. B. Picken - 1997 - Asian Philosophy 7 (2):109 – 121.
    The paper discusses the historical roots of the political cultures of Japan and China by examining the principal characteristics of their traditional Imperial systems. Comparison of the logic of legitimacy in each case, namely divine lineage in Japan in contrast to the awesome but demanding Mandate of Heaven in China, highlights the philosophical difference between reigning and ruling, and the consequences of this for modem politics in each country. A sacral aura still surrounds the Japanese system tending to insulate authority (...)
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  • Labor-related civil society actors in China: a Gramscian analysis.Elaine Sio-Ieng Hui - 2020 - Theory and Society 49 (1):49-74.
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