Capitalist Trade in the Making of Mao’s China
Virtual
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The Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs' East Asia Program presents Jason Kelly. China today seems caught in a contradiction: a capitalist state led by a Communist party. But this seeming paradox is hardly new. Since the 1930s, well before the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) came to power, CCP traders have sought deals with capitalists around the world. During the Mao era, this quest for access to overseas capitalist markets—alongside China’s embrace of socialist revolution at home—created a paradoxical momentum at the heart of the Chinese revolution. What motivations and rationales lay behind the CCP’s early search for capitalist trade? How did this trade shape the making of Mao’s China? And why does this Maoist trade with capitalists matter today? This talk explores these questions by drawing from Kelly’s recent book, Market Maoists: The Communist Origins of China’s Capitalist Ascent.
Jason M. Kelly is Senior Lecture in the Department of Politics and International Relations at Cardiff University and Associate in Research at the Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies at Harvard University. Trained as a historian of modern China, he was also previously a Foreign Service Officer at the U.S. Embassy in Beijing.
Category
Social Science and Public Policy
Type
Talks
Region
Virtual
Open to
Public
Organizers
MAX-Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs, MAX-East Asia Program
Accessibility
Contact Juanita Horan to request accommodations
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