Illustration:
ill. 0.4 b (set: 0.4)
Date:
1993
Genre:
CD cover, photograph, music, songs
Material:
photograph, colour; original source: CD cover, colour
Source:
CD Cover: Popstar Mao: Red Sun Song Collection, Private copy/photograph, 1993.
Courtesy:
Barbara Mittler
Inscription:
毛泽东颂歌新节奏联唱 1 - 5 辑 * 珍藏版 红太阳
Keywords:
Mao Zedong, red sun, hero, mass culture, Popstar Mao, music, Mao Cult, Mao Fever, contemporary China, popular culture, Mao portrai, Mao memories, nostalgia, Red is the East, Cultural Revolution, Tian'anmen Square, Mao badge
Popstar Mao (Liuxing Mao 流星毛)
What is it that makes Mao Zedong and the propaganda products accompanying his period of reign in China attractive? Why is it that present-day Chinese politics and the everyday experience of life in China, is determined by this very propaganda? Jung Chang 张戎 (1952–) in her voluminous biography of Mao entitled Mao: The Unknown Story (Chang and Halliday 2005) nowhere addresses this issue. Mao, the main figure in her book, was a political leader who led his Party comrades, and then the entire country, through a series of cataclysms. Yet Mao, the “monster” whom she depicts, is not the only relevant Mao to contemporary China; he remains, for many, the symbol of an egalitarian, altruistic past, a past which has only recently been buried with the victory of “socialist capitalism.” This is why Mao appears as a star in many blockbuster movies and pop songs as can be seen here, why he can function (with his successors Deng Xiaoping 邓小平 (1904–97) and Jiang Zemin 江泽民 (1926–) as a New Year’s god, and why he can serve as a talisman for taxi drivers, hanging from their mirrors (see ill. 5.77 and ill. 5.76).