The Question of Socialism in China: An Introduction

IF 2 2区 社会学 Q1 AREA STUDIES
R. Westra
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract Heady days of the Soviet revolution mooted questions of the contours of socialism. However, following World War II, questions of socialism would reappear on the Left agenda as indications spread of the Soviet Union not living up to Marx’s sketches of what a socialist society should look like. Following the Soviet collapse, the global Left was forced to both rethink basic questions of socialism and consider whether other societies self-identifying as socialist could be upheld as really existing exemplars of Marx’s vision for the human future. China, under Mao, was initially embraced by the Left as the new representative of really existing socialism. But, following the 1978 reforms of its economy towards markets and opening to international capital it fell out of favour in Left circles. Yet, China’s unparalleled successes among Third World economies in economic growth and poverty alleviation had, by the early twenty-first century, placed it once again in the crosshairs of Left debate over socialism. While vigorous debate swirled around the question of socialism in the erstwhile Soviet Union there has been less sustained debate over the question of socialism in China. What follows in this article and the Feature Section of the journal is an attempt to remedy this deficit by bringing international Left scholarship to bear upon the important question of the kind of society and economy that is represented by China.
中国社会主义问题导论
苏联革命的狂热时期提出了社会主义轮廓的问题。然而,在第二次世界大战之后,社会主义问题将重新出现在左翼议程上,因为有迹象表明苏联没有达到马克思所描绘的社会主义社会的样子。苏联解体后,全球左派被迫重新思考社会主义的基本问题,并考虑其他自我认同为社会主义的社会是否可以作为马克思对人类未来愿景的真正存在的典范来维护。在毛的领导下,中国最初被左派视为现实社会主义的新代表。但是,随着1978年经济改革走向市场并向国际资本开放,它在左翼圈子中失宠了。然而,到21世纪初,中国在经济增长和减轻贫困方面在第三世界经济体中取得了无与伦比的成功,这再次使它成为左派关于社会主义辩论的焦点。在前苏联,围绕社会主义问题展开了激烈的辩论,而在中国,关于社会主义问题的辩论却没有那么持久。这篇文章和《华尔街日报》的专题部分试图通过将国际左派学术引入中国所代表的社会和经济类型这一重要问题来弥补这一缺陷。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
9.10%
发文量
70
期刊介绍: The Journal of Contemporary Asia is an established refereed publication, it appears quarterly and has done so since 1970. When the journal was established, it was conceived as providing an alternative to mainstream perspectives on contemporary Asian issues. The journal maintains this tradition and seeks to publish articles that deal with the broad problems of economic, political and social development of Asia. Articles on economic development issues, political economy, agriculture, planning, the working class, people"s movements, politics and power, imperialism and empire, international financial institutions, the environment, and economic history are especially welcomed.
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