China moves to revive Marxism

11 Nov, 2005

China's Communist Party plans to spend millions of dollars to revive Marxism in an apparent bid to shore up its political legitimacy and fill an ideological vacuum that has spawned official corruption.
The step might seem unusual coming more than 50 years after the Communists swept to power and almost three decades after the end of the Cultural Revolution relegated copies of Mao Zedong's Little Red Book to storage trunks and shops for foreign tourists.
Communist revolution has been replaced by economic revolution and Soviet-style building projects by skyscrapers, while the German economist's theories have become virtually unread in China after more than two decades of market-oriented reforms.
But the new directive appears to have come from the top. Communist Party chief Hu Jintao was trained as an engineer, but spent his early career as an ideological commissar and has overseen a series of campaigns to harden party orthodoxy.
The party, which has monopolised power since 1949 and ruled out Western-style democracy, is borrowing from Marx once again.
About 100 million yuan ($12 million) will be poured into the first stage of the "Marxist Theoretical Research and Construction Project", an academic with knowledge of the plan told Reuters.
"Whatever amount is asked for will be given," said the academic, who asked not to be identified.
"Marxism will be utilised to explain the party's (political) theories, policies and goals and emphasise the Communist Party's legitimacy," he said.
Unlike previous translations, most based on Russian-language versions of Marx's works from the former Soviet Union, the latest tomes will be taken directly from the German.
The government's 11th five-year development plan covering 2006-2010 calls for "strengthen(ing) Marxist theoretical research and construction".
Under the plan, a 300-strong team will publish 13 new university textbooks on issues ranging from philosophy to political economy, political science, sociology, law, history, news and literature, the Oriental Outlook magazine said.
The textbooks will have "characteristics of contemporary Chinese Marxism" and replace earlier versions based on Soviet translations, it said.
They need to be approved by the party's all-powerful, nine-member Politburo Standing Committee before publication, the weekly said, in an indication of their political weight.

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