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Call it the “Little Crimson Book.”
Mao’s famous “Little Red Book” now has a popular companion sitting on many bookshelves across China.
A biography of Mao Zedong, penned by Harvard scholar Ross
Terrill, a senior research associate at the Fairbank Center for Asian
Studies, has experienced a sudden surge in Chinese sales this year, the
30th anniversary of Chairman Mao’s death.
The book, “Mao: A Biography,” has sold more than 50,000
copies since January in a reprinted Chinese translation of the
original, which was first published in 1980.
The book was first released in China around the time of the
Tiananmen Square uprising and sold well from the beginning, according
to Terrill.
The author’s interest in Mao began years ago. He said that he
first went to China while “an Australian student wandering around the
world, banging on doors.”
“I started working on Mao when I realized that the ideas of
the party didn’t mean as much as the power structure and the
personality on top,” he said, adding that he thinks Mao acts as a
“magnifying glass for China...the whims of the dictator get translated
into policy.”
Terrill said that his book aims to present a balanced account of Mao as an individual.
“There is a hunger in China for Mao as a human being,” Terrill
said, adding that many Chinese are fascinated by the personal details
of Mao’s life that have not typically been part of the nation’s public
discourse.
“[The Chinese] are interested in things like, that he had a
farmer’s taste in food, slept by day and worked by night, [and] liked
Peking opera,” he said.
Terrill added that he happened across a department store
window in Shanghai featuring a mannequin advertising green silk
pajamas. That model was none other than Chairman Mao.
“There is great pride [in China] that Mao is world famous and
that he is Chinese, but they don’t deny that he did a lot of damage,”
he said.
Ronald Suleski, assistant director of the Fairbank Center,
said he believed that much of the nostalgia for Mao comes from the
younger generation. It is this group, Terrill said, who might be buying
those green silk pajamas.
On the difference between Western and Chinese approaches to
scholarship of Mao, Suleski said that “Western scholars are free to
discuss [Mao’s] contradictions, while the Chinese cannot treat him as a
completely neutral character.”
Terrill said that Harvard has forged a closer relationship
with China over the past 25 years, citing the success of the Fairbank
Center and Harvard’s many cultural exchanges and visiting scholars as
examples of increasingly strong ties.
Terrill was educated at the University of Melbourne, and came
to Harvard in 1965 to earn his Ph.D. He joined the faculty in 1970, and
since the 1980s has been an independent writer and associate at the
Fairbank Center. He is the author of seven books on China, including a
biography of Mao’s wife Madame Mao.
That book has been more controversial in China. A Chinese bookstore clerk once refused to sell Terrill a copy.
“She asked me, ‘do you have permission from your work unit?,’
Terrill recalled. “When I told her I was the author, she checked with
the boss. He said I couldn’t buy it.”
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