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  2. Big-character poster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big-character_poster

    During the Great Leap Forward, big-character posters were also used in rural villages to rectify the operation of People's Communes and to promote production. [62] Many news articles claimed that big-character posters had motivated farmers and contributed to an increase in production.

  3. Great Leap Forward - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Leap_Forward

    The Great Leap Forward also prompted a wave of the New Guohua Campaign in which the state commissioned landscape artists to paint new production projects; select paintings of the campaign were taught in schools, published widely as propaganda posters, exhibited in museums, and used as the backdrops of state events. [185]

  4. Four Pests campaign - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four_Pests_campaign

    The propaganda posters offered no scientific explanation for why the campaign was necessary. Instead, they featured dramatic depictions of children heroically exterminating the pests, and hence playing their role in the Great Leap Forward. The propaganda served to frame the campaign as more than an effort to improve hygiene.

  5. Cultural Revolution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_Revolution

    The Great Leap Forward stemmed from multiple factors, including "the purge of intellectuals, the surge of less-educated radicals, the need to find new ways to generate domestic capital, rising enthusiasm about the potential results mass mobilization might produce, and reaction against the sociopolitical results of the Soviet's development ...

  6. Bombard the Headquarters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bombard_the_Headquarters

    Bombard The Headquarters – My Big-Character Poster (Chinese: 炮 打 司令部——我的一张大字报; pinyin: Pào dǎ sīlìng bù——wǒ de yī zhāng dàzì bào) was a short document written by Chairman Mao Zedong on August 5, 1966, during the 11th plenary session of the 8th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party, [1] and published in the Communist Party's official ...

  7. Three Red Banners - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_Red_Banners

    Three Red Banners (Chinese: 三面红旗) was an ideological slogan in the late 1950s which called on the Chinese people to build a socialist state.The "Three Red Banners" also called the "Three Red Flags," consisted of the General Line for socialist construction, the Great Leap Forward and the people's communes.

  8. Iron Girls - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iron_Girls

    A propaganda poster with Iron Girls. Iron Girls (sometimes translated as Iron Women) is a term that was popularized in China during the 1950s through the 1970s.It was used to define a new idealized emerging group of working women who were strong and capable of performing highly demanding labor tasks, usually assigned to men.

  9. Mao Zedong's cult of personality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mao_Zedong's_cult_of...

    Mao left his successors a country in a deep, comprehensive crisis. After the Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution, China's economy stagnated, intellectual and cultural life was crushed by left-wing radicals, political culture was completely absent [56] [57] due to excessive public politicization and ideological chaos. The crippled ...