ABSTRACT

Mao: The Unknown Story by Jung Chang and Jon Halliday was published in 2005 to a great fanfare. The book portrays Mao as a monster – equal to or worse than Hitler and Stalin – and a fool who won power by native cunning and ruled by terror. It received a rapturous welcome from reviewers in the popular press and rocketed to the top of the worldwide bestseller list. Few works on China by writers in the West have achieved its impact.

Reviews by serious China scholars, however, tended to take a different view. Most were sharply critical, questioning its authority and the authors’ methods , arguing that Chang and Halliday’s book is not a work of balanced scholarship, as it purports to be, but a highly selective and even polemical study that sets out to demonise Mao.

This book brings together sixteen reviews of Mao: The Unknown Story – all by internationally well-regarded specialists in modern Chinese history, and published in relatively specialised scholarly journals. Taken together they demonstrate that Chang and Halliday’s portrayal of Mao is in many places woefully inaccurate. While agreeing that Mao had many faults and was responsible for some disastrous policies, they conclude that a more balanced picture is needed.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

part |27 pages

Reviews in non-specialist academic publications

part |43 pages

Reviews in The China Journal

part |24 pages

Reviews in other specialist academic journals

chapter |12 pages

Mao and The Da Vinci Code

Conspiracy, narrative and history

chapter |10 pages

Mao

A super monster?

part |53 pages

Chinese reviews

part |24 pages

Other reviews

chapter |11 pages

Mao lives

chapter |11 pages

From Wild Swans to Mao

The Unknown Story