To Rebel is Justified: A Rhetorical Study of China's Cultural Revolution Movement, 1966-1969University Press of America, 1996 - 221 頁 Differentiating from other studies on China's cultural revolution movement (CRM) which mostly have focused on the infra-party power struggle, the hypnotizing power of the cult of the individual, or the cruelty of man-made class struggle, this book describes, examines, and evaluates the major rhetorical theme of the movement which is summarized in the slogan, 'rebellion is justified'. The orienting model for this criticism is William R. Brown's theory of social intervention. The three sub-systems of Brown's model, needs, power, and attention-switching, are used to explain respectively the growth and development of Mao's needs for change, the people's response to Mao's call for rebellion, and the rhetorical strategies employed by Mao and Maoists to shape the symbolic realities of the audience. This is the first book to analyze the CRM rhetoric using communication theories. |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 20 筆
第 77 頁
... individual needs , motives , and beliefs are named -- leads to a communication - system view of the rise and fall of ideologies ; they flourish when the communication system compensates for vicious circles , and they decline when it ...
... individual needs , motives , and beliefs are named -- leads to a communication - system view of the rise and fall of ideologies ; they flourish when the communication system compensates for vicious circles , and they decline when it ...
第 79 頁
... individuals develop and realize their needs , they will consciously or unconsciously take their cultural norms into consideration . To a certain extent , an individual's growth - and - survival needs grow out of their culture . One of ...
... individuals develop and realize their needs , they will consciously or unconsciously take their cultural norms into consideration . To a certain extent , an individual's growth - and - survival needs grow out of their culture . One of ...
第 80 頁
... individual had to contribute to the general welfare and do nothing to disrupt the order and stability deemed so vital to the functioning of the system on which community life depended " ( 12 ) . Submissiveness and obedience were ...
... individual had to contribute to the general welfare and do nothing to disrupt the order and stability deemed so vital to the functioning of the system on which community life depended " ( 12 ) . Submissiveness and obedience were ...
內容
Introduction | 1 |
Browns Social Intervention Model | 9 |
The Rhetorical History of the | 17 |
著作權所有 | |
10 個其他區段未顯示
常見字詞
According active advocacy alliance Army attack attention August authority became Beijing believed big-character poster bourgeois reactionary line Brown's bureaucracy cadres called campaign capitalist road carried Central Committee Chairman Mao China Chinese Committee communication Communist concept Confucian created CRGCC criticism CRM rhetoric Cultural Revolution directive early economism editorial established experience factional five followed force former four handful Heaven ideology important intervention January June later leaders leadership learned major maneuvers Mao's masses meeting military movement official participation Party peasants People's People's Daily period persons political practice proletarian Province question rebel organizations rebellion Red Flag Red Guards relationships representatives revolutionary ritual schools seize Shanghai social socialist speech stage started strategy struggle symbolic tactics teams theory thought traditional units University whole workers young