The State That Mao Built
- 18 July 1967
- journal article
- Published by Project MUSE in World Politics
- Vol. 19 (4) , 664-677
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2009719
Abstract
China has been such a big unit during most of the last two thousand years that it has habitually been thought of in terms of models, whether Legalist, Confucian, Neo-Confucian, or Communist. To put it another way, the remarkable early success of Chinese administrators in setting up and maintaining a centralized bureaucracy was part and parcel of their inveterate penchant for blueprinting the social order. Today "China" is one of the largest concrete referents commonly used in discussions of world politics. Generalizing about China is a particularly daring venture, but it is a game we continue to play because the Chinese have always played it. Before appraising the most interesting recent treatment of China in this customary fashion—Franz Schur-mann's book Ideology and Organization in Communist China—I should like to look briefly at the fashion itself.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Chinese Mediation on the Eve of ModernizationCalifornia Law Review, 1966
- The Beginnings of Bureaucracy in China: The Origin of theHsienJournal of Asian Studies, 1964
- Chinese Communist Studies of Modern Chinese HistoryPublished by JSTOR ,1961