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== See also links == | |||
==Very biased account== | |||
A very biased account (with omissions, mis-presentations and mis-interpretations) of the aspirations and achievements of a man whose legacy can only by adequately judged by historians of the future (and maybe some farsighted historians of today who have comprehensive and unbiased knowledge of all the history related). {{unsigned|71.224.215.111}} | |||
I wondered why there is no "See also" links, that is why I began to add links. If other editors disagree with the links I add, we can have a discussion here. Any thoughts?<i><b><small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">]</span></small> ]</b></i> 18:51, 24 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
My Chinese History professor once had a meeting with many other prominent scholars in this field to discuss the credibility of the book. | |||
:There is no requirement that every article have seealsos (in fact, MOS can be interpreted to mean that it's better not to have seealsos if possible), so the fact that there weren't any is not a problem. | |||
:The links you were adding are not relevant to this article. Most were books/articles about communism (and mostly about Russian communism), not about Mao in particular; this article is the exact opposite, it's about Mao and not about communism (and if you've read the book, you would see that Chang believes communism is not even that relevant—she thinks it was just a path he took to gain power and that he didn't care that much about it ideologically. Many would disagree with that analysis, but since it's what's in the book then that's what's relevant to this article). Others were about specific historical events and not really relevant to an article about a book. <b class="Unicode">]</b> <small><sup>]</sup>/<sub>]</sub></small> 18:56, 24 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Well, first of all, wikipedia is to help readers to learn, to broaden the horizon of knowledge, to learn more things. This book is more about Mao, that I agree; but if we take Mao out of the context of Chinese revolution, which was both insipired and funded by the Russian communist, and more over, if we remove all the elements of communism, that means if we take out the ] elements, then readers would only be able to see Mao in a very limited and vague kind of perspective. | |||
They found many dubious matters in the book such as that the authors frequently (perhaps purposely) incorrectly cite other sources in order to strengthen their arguments as well as use information that have no backup at all. | |||
What I am saying is, the Red ] and the Chinese CCP(hence Mao Zedong) is very much linked together. Without the ], there would not be any Mao.<i><b><small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">]</span></small> ]</b></i> 19:13, 24 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
In the end, they concluded that the book is factually and intellectually unreliable. | |||
::Comintern's funding of CCP: | |||
Driven by curiosity, I borrowed a copy from a friend and read couple dozen pages, and concluded that the book is more like an anti-communist propaganda and I should just trust my professor/her colleages' words. {{unsigned|68.236.56.136}} | |||
] | |||
:So? It's hardly news that some academics disagree with the book - their views are already on the page. Just as the views of those that support the book are. ] 17:30, 8 January 2007 (UTC) | |||
*斯大林政權对中共之援助 | |||
:Besides, do you think anyone actually is actually going to listen to your unsourced, anonymous criticisms? Considering that you only managed to read through a "couple dozen" pages, you can hardly claim to have the right to criticize the book. ]] 00:40, 5 February 2007 (UTC) | |||
*(季米特洛夫于1941年7月2日向莫洛托夫等送交了要求向中国党提供200万美元援款的建议书。联共(布)中央讨论后,次日即批准马上援助中国同志100万美元。但此一援款拖到16日仍未能发出,原因是中国(南京)政府对苏联方面要求派飞机飞往延安一事迟迟不予答复。据此,季米特洛夫明确致信莫洛托夫提出)"由于使中国同志尽快获得至少是一半的援助非常重要,我们相信有必要采取非法的方式用飞机通过蒙古发送运费。" | |||
:: This page does not present a world wide view. As I've said elsewhere, I've not yet read a single positive review of the book in a reputable Chinese language publication. --] (]) 00:56, 19 February 2007 (UTC) | |||
**季米特洛夫日記 | |||
*给八路军武器援助,这要苏联政府决定,不过照他的看法,假若援助了,这可能不是帮助了你们,而是害了你们。...因为这会恶化国共关系并为国民党孤立和封锁延安提供口实。最后,....共产国际从它的外汇中拨出三十万美元送给中国共产党。 | |||
:::Since when was a book's quality established on that basis? ] 10:36, 19 February 2007 (UTC) | |||
**徐则浩:《王稼祥传》,当代中国出版社1996年版,第296-297页。 | |||
*援助中国共产党50万美元。(2月17日的日记中,季米特洛夫记下了与斯大林、莫洛托夫谈话后的结果.) | |||
:::Sumple, if you can source that, then it's valid material for the article. I would be especially interested in any Chinese sources giving it bad reviews outside of the PRC, but as long as they're reputable it's fine. ]] 12:29, 1 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
**季米特洛夫日記 | |||
:::Such links ''might'' be relevant in the article on ] (and most are probably already present in the main text). They're not relevant in the article about this book. | |||
== Sumple's compilation of Chinese language criticism of the book == | |||
:::As for "broadening the horizon of learning"... that is only possible if links given are restricted to those that are relevant. If a reader is given a sea of links, he won't follow any of them. Otherwise, you could just say that every article in the encyclopedia should link to every other article (millions of see-alsos). <b class="Unicode">]</b> <small><sup>]</sup>/<sub>]</sub></small> 19:38, 24 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
::No, I am not saying ''every article should link to every other article'', please do not put words into my mouth. What I am saying is: | |||
This section contains Sumple's compilation of Chinese language articles or other works criticising the book. I am planning to build these up before writing them as a section for insertion into the article. Please add any comments you may have in the "comments" subsection below. | |||
# If we take out ''Communism'' from Mao, then there is nothing left. In fact, ''Communism'' has provide Mao the center stage. | |||
* Source: {{cite news |first= Yu|last= Luo|authorlink= |coauthors= |title= To Jung Chang|url= |work= ]|publisher= ]|date= 2007-03-05|accessdate= }} | |||
#] was the most important supporter of Mao, without Stalin, there would not be any Mao. ] | |||
** Luo Yu, son of ] Senior General Luo Ruiqing, and noted critic of Mao in his memoirs and other works, criticises Jung Chang's work because of its selective use of primary sources, open bias, and over-simplification and generalisation. | |||
*(1941年11月11日接见被选派回国的王明、康生等人时的谈话内容)共产国际书记处的决定已经过时了(指王明在西安事变欲殺掉蔣介石之提議)...这就是人们坐在办公室里冥思苦想的结果!....对于中国共产党现在基本的问题是:融入全民族的浪潮并取得领导地位...中国人怎样打击外部敌人-这是决定性的问题。当这一问题结束时,再提出怎样互相打的问题! | |||
** Luo criticises Jung Chang's neglect of the considerable body of work analysing Mao, his policies, and actions. For example, he criticises Jung Chang's use of ]'s personal statements without any attempt at analysing the underlying tension and complex relationship between Peng and Mao. | |||
**季米特洛夫日記 | |||
** Luo notes that Jung Chang lacks an understanding of the differences between ] and], in terms of ideology, organisation, and makeup. Most importantly, Jung Chang generalises her personal hatred of Mao to a complete condemnation of all Communist Party and Mao supporters. | |||
If we follow this argument, the links to those anti-communism authors would be very much relevent. | |||
** Luo most emphatically objects to Jung Chang's simplistic equation of Mao with ] and ]. \ | |||
** Luo also criticises Jung Chang's reliance on unreliable primary sources and personal inference. For example, he likens to the '']'' Jung chang's "revelation", on tenuous evidence and in defiance of the weight of historical evidence and academic consensus, that ] "allowed" Mao to march to ]. As another example, he cites Jung Chang's claim that the ] was started by soldiers firing by mistake in the chaos, rather than by ] and ], this time relying almost exclusively on primary evidence of dubious authenticity allegedly smuggled out of China. (''Personal note: I've read the published version of these documents, and I agree that they are of very dubious authenticity.'') | |||
** Luo also criticises the extent to which Jung Chang makes inferences from her personal experiences in the Mao-era. Luo explains that, as the son of a senior minister and general, he understood the ''complete lack'' of access of someone in Jung Chang's position to information about the inner workings of government, especially Mao's personal thoughts and intentions. Thus, he explained, while '']'' dealt with a subject close to Jung Chang's life, her lack of understanding of the subject matter of ''Mao'' contributed to her simplistic portrayal of Mao. --] (]) 08:38, 5 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
===Comments=== | |||
Are there no reviews in the Standard? And by the way, who is this guy other than some general's son - is he a historian? ] 17:08, 5 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:As a side-note, if something is added it needs to be pretty brief - there are already a lot of comments. ] 17:10, 5 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:: I don't know if he's a historian. This article was published in a newspaper. But he has published historical memoirs, dealing with Mao and other "founding fathers" of Communist China, which imo makes him at least as authoritative as Jung Chang. But I will look for his biographical details where possible. | |||
:: As to length - I know. I won't be putting all this into the article. This is just my notes for when that section does get written. (after I dig up more material) --] (]) 22:00, 5 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::Still irrelevant. Sure, communism is closely related with Mao, but the book is not about communism in general, and adding a pile of communism links to the article is not helpful. You can speculate all you want about where Mao would be without communism, but that doesn't change what this article is about. <b class="Unicode">]</b> <small><sup>]</sup>/<sub>]</sub></small> 20:58, 24 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
=="Views of the book"== | |||
::I would like to challenge you removal of all the links in a kind of adamant way. What about we discuss the links one of a time, and invite other editors to join in, instead of only you and me?<i><b><small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">]</span></small> ]</b></i> 21:09, 24 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
If newspaper commentators are to be ignored in this section, why does Philip Short get a look-in? One of the criticisms I've heard of Jung Chang is that she isn't a historian - but neither is Short. So why does one non-academic get special treatment here so that he can be included? Roy Hattersley has written books as well and his article in the Guardian isn't mentioned. ] 11:40, 16 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
*] | |||
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:::You are welcome to invite others to the discussion. <b class="Unicode">]</b> <small><sup>]</sup>/<sub>]</sub></small> 21:19, 24 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
: I agree that there needs to be consistent treatment. But on what basis are newspaper commentators excluded? --] (]) 11:26, 19 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::And in response to your list of links, here are why most of them are not applicable. Almost all of them are several levels of relationship away from ''Mao: The Unknown Story'': | |||
:::*]: Relevant to the article on Mao himself, not relevant here (unless as an inline link somewhere) | |||
:::*]: One purge. Maybe relevant to the article on Mao himself, not relevant here. | |||
:::*]: Writer known for his work on Russia, no work on China. | |||
:::*]: Book by the above, not about China. | |||
:::*]: same. | |||
:::*]: Historical event in Russia, not in China. | |||
:::*]: ''Fiction'' book about Soviet prison | |||
:::*]: Historical event in Russia; no direct analogue in PRC history | |||
:::*]: Journalist with a focus on Eastern Europe | |||
:::*]: Professor who happens to have written one book about China. The book ''might'' be relevant if it had an article; the man is not. | |||
:::*]: Russian historian, no significant work on China | |||
:::*]: same | |||
:::*]: Book by the above, not about China. | |||
:::*]: physical monument in D.C., happens to mention the Cultural Revolution but that's about it | |||
:::Arilang, based on your past work, I know you have a strong anti-PRC POV, and here it just looks like you're trying to add in as many links to ugly, negative things to add more negative associations to Mao. I am certainly not a pro-Mao person, but I object to your POV-pushing. <b class="Unicode">]</b> <small><sup>]</sup>/<sub>]</sub></small> 21:29, 24 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
::''Strong anti-PRC POV'', I guess not. Put it this way, after reading many original CCP documents:] and ], the CCP, hence Mao, could only be viewed as a gang of plotters and conspirators, because most of the time their activities were about back stabbing and mud slingling. CCP cannot be viewed as a what we commonly know as a normal political party, thus, Mao cannot be viewed as a commonly known ''politician''. | |||
::Because there are so many of them and wikipedia is not a review page - or something like that (I forget the actual term). The current "academic" focus was designed to limit the number of reviews that could be included in the page itself. If we open it up to newspaper reviews, then it will grow hugely and become a consolidation of those reviews - that isn't what the article is supposed to do. In the past there were problems with people wanting to stuff a review in they'd read. We should really only have a few, serious views from each side to indicate the sort of opinions out there. Indeed I was wondering if we couldn't reduce the previous version of the reviews section and make proper citations of them. ] 11:37, 19 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::Let me run another quote from Chinese wikipedia(of the same name): | |||
:::Thanks for using the talk page. My view is that just as we limit academics to those in the actual field, we should limit reviews of others writers to those who have some authority in the field, as well. In short, from a scholarly and reliable source. Philip Short is allowed because of this reason. The writer I included, Pomfret, has spent seven years covering China, and studied at Nanjing University; he was awarded the Osborne Elliot Award for the best coverage of Asia by the Asia Society, and has written a book on "New China." Thus, his reivew and views of this book are worthy for inclusion. The other factor for deciding if the writer's view should be included other than reliability, in my opinion, is if it demonstrates a POV not already included in the article, but this is mainly for size. If a POV is wide spread we can say so in one sentence and just pick one or two of the best sources to express the POV. I felt this POV was a little lacking, although it surely is not lacking in the reviews and literature published about this book.] 15:37, 19 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
{{cquote|香港《開放》月刊总编辑金鐘声称,毛泽东不为人知的故事还很多,未来会一部一部问世。「毛逝世三十年来,第一个十年有李锐的《庐山会议实录》;第二个十年有李志绥的《毛泽东私人医生回忆录》;第三个十年就是张戎夫妇的《毛泽东:鲜为人知的故事》。这是具有里程碑意义的。」的。」}} | |||
::里程碑意义 translated as: of milestone significance. | |||
::::But Pomfret has done zero research/not written a book on Mao. Writing books on China doesn't make him nearly as qualified as Short. I also don't see anything he says as being special compared to other reviews posted. ] 16:15, 19 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::In my opinion(NPOV or not), to say that the book is about Mao, and Mao only, is both adament, and wrong. To put it in the right context, the book is about Mao and communist revolution, Mao and Chinese civil war, Mao and KMT, Mao and ], Mao and ]. To delete all these links is simply wrong.<i><b><small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">]</span></small> ]</b></i> 23:26, 24 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::Maybe not qualified as Short but still qualified enough. One does not write a book on China's politics and history, and study China in general, without learning about Mao. His views carry weight.] 17:15, 19 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::If you think this book is not first and foremost about Mao, you should look again at the first page (all about Mao), the last page (about Mao's body at Tiananmen), the front cover, the title page, or any other page in the book. And you still haven't demonstrated why these links are relevant (what does the CCP's status as "plotters and conspirators" have to do with that?). | |||
::::::That's not a valid argument, nor does it address the point about having so many reviews in. There were already 6 reviews/commentators mentioned. Where does it stop? 8? 10? 20? Don't say adding his in is "just enough". Also I have yet to hear what is so necessary about his comments. ] 17:48, 19 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::And about your anti-PRC POV? . I rest my case. <b class="Unicode">]</b> <small><sup>]</sup>/<sub>]</sub></small> 02:17, 25 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::I've also just noticed there is no link to the review. Someone will need to dig out a valid link, or I will eventually have to remove the reference regardless of how the discussion goes. ] 17:52, 19 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::I added in the link to the full and actual review. I also added back the introduction to the writer. Its important because it speaks to his qualifications to speak on the matter. As far has his book is concerned, perhaps you should take a look at its actual subject matter. It pertains to many of the exact same things Jung Chang writes about. In fact, in reviews of his book, its is often compared to Mao The Unknown Story. For the same reason Philip Short is included, so should be he be. Both writers are similarly qualified and have published books on the same subject matters.] 20:50, 19 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::::Giovanni, you do not say things like "Award winning writer on China related matters", because it is too biased in his favour. Jung Chang has been given awards, but I can promise you if I tried to insert that into references to her people would remove them very fast. If someone made a page for him then all his awards can be listed - but you don't make biased comments like that when mentioning what they say as it gives them a special profile. Do you think none of the other people mentioned have never won a prize? Thanks for the link, but I must insist on removing the laudatory statement. Plus you should not advertise people's websites and the like - but I'll convert it to his name, so people can learn about him. I also cut down on the extracts while we talk about this. | |||
::::::::As to the rest, I don't see that as a justification over him being included when I have talked about the fact he isn't an academic, he hasn't published a book on Mao like Short and we have lots of other reviews by deserving and knowledgeable people that have been left out to keep the "views" section down. As I keep saying this is not supposed to be a review of the book, nor to regurgitate information from every interesting one. ] 21:15, 19 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::I will compromise and accept your removal but I put in a little more from the actual review, which you removed. I left out most, still. Also, you're wrong that he didn't publish a book about Mao. His book is largly about Mao and his programs, and the effects they had on people. If we have other reviews from other writers who have published books on China's history, we should take a look to see if what they say merits mention, or is already covered. Its a case by case basis but we apply the same standards.] 21:26, 19 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::So, technically, you're saying dozens more reviews could go in? There's no end to it? From what I understand Pomfret's book discusses in part fallout that Mao had - it isn't a book into his life and career. ] 22:30, 19 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::No, there is a limit to cover the range of opionin and then give appropriate weight. As it stands its not too big and can be bigger, if there are other qualified responses that have not been covered yet. This does not create a slippery slope. Pomfret's book is not a biography, but it is sufficently about many of the same historical and political debates about Mao and his policies and that alone suffices to make him a reliable writer whose opinion is as worthy as Shorts.] 23:06, 19 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::Well I might be willing to let it stand, though I might want to adjust it further. Also I've been looking at some other reviews - maybe another could go in. ] 19:52, 20 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::I simply find the dogmatic insistence on the placement of these links in contravention to ] and thus should obviously be removed. I second Rjanag. ]+<small>(])</small> 02:22, 25 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
Instead of reverting again, I'm going to bring this issue here to see what others think. The text I've removed from the section that is supposed to be dealing with responses the book has recieved is as follows: | |||
'' | |||
'''Third opinion''': Adding in all of those links is disruptive to the article and is wholly unneeded. — ] <sup>]</sup> 03:08, 25 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
''"In other cases, Chang and Halliday's arguments have been supported indirectly. In the book they wrote that the Communists spent more time fighting the ] than the ], a point that has also been made by various military historians researching the ]."'' | |||
*I tend to agree with the point-by-point reasoning of Rjanag above. I do not see the links having 'informative' value. In fact, I believe they may even risk giving ] to a particular viewpoint, or creating an opinion by ]. ] ] 03:05, 15 April 2010 (UTC) | |||
== Balancing Praise and Criticism == | |||
The rationale that is given to include this here is that it indirectly supports the book because the book makes the same point others have, at least this particular point. My response is so what? There are many books that make the same points. How is pointing out that there are non original claims advanced by the authors of this book, who repeat the claims put forward by other authors relevant to the reactions this book has recieved!?--On a side note, its besides the point but often times they borrow these old claims, some of them refuted--some not--but do not credit the original authors, but pass them off as original. Still, this has nothing to do with what the section is supposed to be about: reviews/reactions to the book. Saying "this other book makes the same point, see:" does not fit.] 00:15, 21 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:One significant criticism made of the book was that the point made was incorrect. So the article was inserted to show this wasn't just their view. I don't know why you're being so inflexible over this. ] 00:38, 21 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
The article says: ''later reviews from China specialists included both support of the book's general conclusions and, from some, criticism of the book's documentation and selective use of sources.'' | |||
::I know, and it still doesn't make sense to me. Does anyone say that they invented this view, and alone share it? On the contrary the critcism is that they pick up old claims that have long already been settled questions among the academic community, such as the claim that the KMT forces allowed Mao's long March on purpose because of Chaing's son being held captive in the USSR. They didn't invent this point, but its a point that most China scholars regard as completely bogus. Does this mean we should entertain the views about this point by citing other works who make it? No. This is not about debating the validity of the points of the book, its about reivews of the book itself by writers who are talking about the book. These are two different things.] 00:53, 21 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
Don't expect anyone whose done serious research into Mao or Chinese history to believe this. As WP stands for a ], I think it is fair that we present both sides of the story. But let's be honest here, the "praise" for this book largely came out of American (and European) newspapers in their "book review" sections while the vast majority of academics rejected the book outright. I am clueless as to who actually "supported" the book's "general conclusions" and what basis they have for it. There is not a single sinologist that would vouch for the credibility of this book, and most have criticized it, some very sharply. When the sole purpose of the book is to destroy Mao's reputation, and the author is someone who is obviously extremely invested in the period, it is impossible to say that the book is in any way objective. ]+<small>(])</small> 13:47, 27 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::Very well. There once was a valid reason for it, but as the objection has now gone I suppose it is rather redundant. However I will try to find something to replace it later on - you can remove it now if you wish. ] 01:19, 21 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::Ok, thanks.] 01:42, 21 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::I agree with you. As someone familiar with this book, I found that sentence misleading. I've adjusted it to read, more honestly, as: "The book became a best-seller in the United Kingdom and North America. Initial reviews gave warm praise, but later reviews from China specialists were generally negative, in particular criticism of the book's documentation and selective use of sources."] (]) 23:37, 8 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
==Crossing of Luding Bridge== | |||
:Hi, Colipon. There was academic praise for the book - it wasn't just journalists. I can think of at least three China specialists in the article that generally praised the book - Perry Link, Stuart Schram and Richard Baum. In regards to being "invested" in the period, are you suggesting that any survivor of the Cultural Revolution would be disqualified from writing an "objective" history? Maybe in that case Chinese people generally are too invested in the Sino-Japanese War and shouldn't be writing about it. | |||
Last night I edited this page to describe an account (Sun Shuyun's) of the Luding Bridge incident that is largely similar to Chang's. I felt that this was fair material to put on the page considering that several sources are listed that disagree with Chang. Moreover, since Sun's book is the newest academic book on the Long March, what it says is particularly relevant. | |||
:As for your last comment, where does the article say it was an objective book? We're not here to review it, so unless there's a claim to the contrary already in there I'm not sure what point you're making. ] (]) 18:32, 27 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Thanks for the reply. I am merely asking for two things: 1. Sure, some have said that the book "contributes to understanding of Mao", but who actually supports the "book's general conclusions"? There were so many conclusions of the book, which one? That Mao was a power-hungry monster who killed tens of millions? That he never brushed his teeth? Its claims about Luding bridge??; 2. the criticism of the book is much more than about the methodology and selective use of sources. It was called a "major disaster in the contemporary China field". There was an immense amount of criticism. The current lede does not do justice to how the book is actually seen in the academic community. ]+<small>(])</small> 18:56, 27 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
The change that I made was reverted by Giovanni33, with the explanation of "This is not about claims of other writers." I take strong exception to this reversion. Why would it be inappropriate to display the claims of other writers when assessing the credibility of Chang's book? Moreover, if it is inappropriate to show what other writers think, then Giovanni33 should have deleted ALL of the other authors' claims. As it stands, Giovanni deleted the one author that agrees with Chang, while leaving intact the claims of Salisbury, Salisbury, and Wilson, all of whom disagree with Chang. This strongly smacks of NPOV. | |||
:::First, I don't think anyone can claim one of the book's general conclusions was that Mao did not brush his teeth. The intention of the part of the lead you refer to is clear in its meaning/intent. | |||
My final quibble is that the page states that "diaries of several veterans of the Long March mention a battle at Luding Bridge." I am currently intensively researching the Luding Bridge incident and, as far as I am aware, this claims is quite untrue. Who are these "several veterans"? Certainly, several veterans wrote of crossing the bridge AFTER the battle, but I am only aware of one first person account (Yang Cheng-wu's) by a witness of the battle. Moreover, the Yang account first appeared in the English language in a propagandistic volume entitled "Stories of the Long March." It was published by the state-sponsored Foreign Languages Press in 1958, as the Great Leap Forward was launched. Needless to say, the authenticity and veracity of an account published at such a time and by that press should be doubted by serious historians. | |||
:::Second, the lead is trying to avoid making a judgment on how much praise and criticism there has been, what weight should be attached to which views, etc. It is honestly trying to be neutral. This isn't the place to debate or evaluate the book or the views of it. ] (]) 19:31, 27 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
Can we perhaps cut the "praise" ''and'' "Criticism" headings and just fit both under a heading called "Critical reception"? After all, not all the "praise" commentary was positive, and not all "criticism" was negative. Reviewers don't just say if a book is good or bad. ]+<small>(])</small> 12:09, 30 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
Since I do not read Chinese, I suppose it is possible that there are Chinese language eyewitness accounts of the battle besides Yang's. But I doubt it. | |||
:I wouldn't have a problem with that, though in the past some people have objected to removing certain criticisms/praises and/or curtailing them. I don't like lots of sub-headings. | |||
:By the way, I stress that I'm happy with change - just that it should be change by consensus given the trouble we've had in the past (though a certain person's ban has ensured things are resolved more peacefully now). ] (]) 12:21, 30 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Let's keep our focus on the book itself, ], not ''Praise and Criticism'', it seems to me this ''Praise and Criticism'' getting larger and larger. To use an analogy, ''Praise and Criticism'' is just like tea and coffee, or deserts, and the ''Book'' itself is the main course. To spend large amount of time talking about tea and coffee, and keep ignoring the main course, is simply a waste of time. | |||
I have two requests: | |||
However, talking about ''Criticism'', CCP should be the one that making all the fuss, because June Chang had said a lot of nasty things about their ''Beloved dear leader''. Since the book's publication(2005?), the CCP had not made even a single statement condemning June Chang and her husband, and their book. Doesn't it tell us somethings?<i><b><small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">]</span></small> ]</b></i> 02:15, 1 December 2009 (UTC) | |||
1. Anyone who wishes to revert the Sun Shuyun paragraph should substantially explain why on this talk page before they go ahead do so. | |||
:Her name is not June. And plenty of people other than the CCP have criticized the book. And what does this comment contribute to the discussion? <b class="Unicode">]</b> <small><sup>]</sup>/<sub>]</sub></small> 02:22, 1 December 2009 (UTC) | |||
::To coin a Chinese phrase, 皇帝不急太監急, translation: The Emperor is relax, and not worried, but the eunuchs are worried to death. What I am saying is, the CCP(as the Emperor), from 2005 to 2009, four years already, had kept quiet about ], beside banning it's sale and distribution in China, though the mainland Chinese netizens still are able to read it somehow, the CCP did not bother to offer any counter-claims at all, whereas those so called ''China experts'' and sinologists are making big noise on the ''errors of the book''. Well, like the Chinese themselves say, when the Emperor himself couldn't care less, and these eunuchs are jumping up and down. I hope this analogy brings a clear message.<i><b><small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">]</span></small> ]</b></i> 03:00, 1 December 2009 (UTC) | |||
2. I would like someone to at least name other eyewitness accounts of the Luding Bridge battle. If no other account is mentioned within the next day or so, I will delete from the page the claim that such accounts exist. | |||
:::Did you ever consider that maybe historians have the right to have their own opinions, regardless of what the CCP thinks? Or do you believe that if the CCP isn't concerned about someone, no one else should be either? <b class="Unicode">]</b> <small><sup>]</sup>/<sub>]</sub></small> 03:02, 1 December 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::Just FYI, Arilang has been making these kinds of statements about China both in Talk pages and in article content for a while now. So take what he says with a grain of salt. ] <small>(] - ])</small> 15:09, 1 December 2009 (UTC) | |||
:I suggest we keep the CPC and Mao seperate. The current policies of the CPC, though they aren't stated that way openly, are a complete repudiation of mao and every thing he stood for.] (]) 18:12, 1 December 2009 (UTC) | |||
] | |||
:The CCP today is not relevant towards this article, apart from the fact it still says Mao was 70% good, 30% bad and has banned this book from sale in China. ] (]) 19:23, 1 December 2009 (UTC) | |||
:First, please use a header for new comments and post at the bottom. I must apologise as I reverted without reading your post too closely (though I have subsequently self-revert. It's fine, actually, as it does go to whether the point about Luding Bridge is credible or not. If we had to delete that, one should delete all the other references too. ] 12:39, 22 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::The CCP does not say Mao is 70% good, 30% bad. ''Deng Xiaoping'' said Mao is 70% good, 30% bad, one to defend his own anti-Maoist ideology, and two to preserve the legitimacy of the Communist revolution. The CCP is extremely critical of Maoist policies, although stops short at being critical of Mao the person. For example, a few years ago, two people got arrested for wanting to "revert China back to the Mao era", and got similar charges to democracy activists. ]+<small>(])</small> 15:39, 4 December 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Thanks for pointing this out. I was also was too quick when I saw what was added and thought it was added to the "response to the book' section, which would be a problem because that section is for authors reacting to the book, not authors who are debating points of contention that the book happens to also talk about. Now I see that it was in a different place (Debates), where this point of contention was the subject matter iteslf, and that this other standard is the correct one in this section. However, you can add a reference/link to support your addition? Thanks. ] 18:10, 22 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::Deng's comments are still the official party line and more importantly books strongly critical of Mao are banned/not for sale in China. If it were the case that the CCP really had moved on from Mao, his portrait would not be hanging over the Forbidden Palace entrance and there would be much more literature on him (i.e. stuff saying he was a bad leader for China). The fact that Vladmir Putin says Stalin was a good guy does not mean he wants to bring back Communism (economically at least). Similarly the fact the CCP does not want a return to Mao's policies does not mean they cannot regard him positively. ] (]) 20:07, 4 December 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::Well, the reference would be the book itself, Gio. To be fair I know he's right, so if he doesn't have a copy I think it's fair to leave it. ] 18:47, 22 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::In any case my point was that the CCP is only relevant in regards to whether they do something about the book (e.g. ban it as they have) or Mao. ] (]) 20:36, 4 December 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::I would like to see the page number cited, and a link if possible for others to verify what is said exactly pertaining to this point. That is what I mean. Also, is ] a historian by training, or even an academic? I find her described as "An adventurer, a writer and a director." I know she has made documentaries, and written two books. In her book, The Long March, I did find this, about the Luding Bridge, where she quotes a local blacksmith who gave her this account: | |||
Exactly what we were talking about? "Balancing Praise and Criticism", we were not talking about the role of CCP. In my opinion, the article's Praise and Criticism section is getting too large in relation to the main content of the article, and needs to be trimmed. Please stay within the topic.<i><b><small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">]</span></small> ]</b></i> 22:25, 5 December 2009 (UTC) | |||
<blockquote> | |||
:What?? ''You're'' the one who started complaining about the CCP. <b class="Unicode">]</b> <small><sup>]</sup>/<sub>]</sub></small> 22:52, 5 December 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::Only a squadron was at the other end. It was a rainy day. Their weapons were old and could only fire a few metres. They were no match for the Red Army. When they saw the soldiers coming, they panicked and fled—their officers had long abandoned them. There wasn't really much of a battle. Still, I take my hat off to the twenty-two soldiers who crawled on the chains. My father and I did it in the old days when we checked the bridge, but we were inside a basket. Those men were brave. They crossed very quickly." | |||
</blockquote> | |||
:I'd like to point out that "balance" should not falsely imply "equality' but reflect the fact that the amount of coverage should balance the general opinions in the academic world, and there has been much more criticism than praise. Accordingly I have restored some of the criticism that was removed, and added in own addition. This, along with fixing the sentence, mentioned above, I feel is a more honest balance.] (]) 23:41, 8 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
::::So by this account there was a battle, although it was not as fierce as purported. Chang claims there was no battle at all, and cites an eye witness who others have not been able to locate to locate, or verify.] 21:14, 22 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::It is not possible to say for the purposes of Misplaced Pages what the "general opinions in the academic world" are as only a tiny number of academics have given any feedback on this book. Your opinion is that, an opinion, even if you feel you are 100% right. Accordingly I don't agree with your changes, including those to the lead section. | |||
:::::There was no battle because the other soldiers ran away. Soldiers being in proximity of each other isn't a battle. ] 21:49, 22 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::The use of feedback on the book should be used sparingly. There is already a view that we need to reduce, not increase, views and make a single section on it. The things you inserted/reverted added nothing to the article whatsoever, and the last point on the Marxist cheerleading Communism is mostly irrelevant to the book. However, the fact that some critics of the book were still critical of Mao is important because it shows that praise/criticism didn't divide according to people's views of Mao. | |||
::::::Semantics. There was a confrontation in which one party was over powered and fled (the warlords). But there was shooting back and forth and in my book that makes it a battle. So by her own account there was at least some kind of battle, which contrasts with the claim there was no battle at all that Chang makes.] 22:21, 22 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::I suggest that we start with the earlier version and try some experimentation in a sandbox before introducing a consensus revision. ] (]) 00:34, 9 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
::::::::Well that is why its good to have the exact text quoted because there are different interpretations. When I read "there was not much of a battle," I read there was still a battle. "Not much" doesnt mean "none," at least for most people, I think.] 22:42, 22 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::Giovanni, most people would think a battle requires fighting. And the blacksmith suggests there was none - so whether he thought there was a battle or not doesn't matter as much as the situation he described. Whether or not there was a "battle", there was no fighting according to this source. The important thing is that Luding Bridge is remembered as some heroic struggle - Jung Chang said that was anything but what happened, as does the extract above. There's no point getting pedantic as to whether the word "battle" applies, given all that's important is whether fighting occurred or not. ] 23:05, 22 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::Its not good to decide for what most people think. Its better to quote what is said and let the reader decide what it means. In most battles, at some point, one side flees. The confrontation of forces occured when they saw each other. The description suggest there were guns fired. That is a battle.] 23:09, 22 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::First of all the material is already quoted on the Luding Bridge page. Second it does not say anywhere that guns were fired, only that they had poor range. To me it says they ran as soon as they saw Communist soldiers and before battle was joined. That's my position. ] 23:15, 22 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::::I know. But, its moot as another editor has already adjusted the language, which I'm fine with.] 00:34, 23 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::::I see you partially reverted the other editor so I substituted the acual wording so the reader can decide if it means not any significant battle or no battle at all: ''"they panicked and fled...There wasn't really much of a battle" at Luding Bridge."''] 00:43, 23 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::: I don't know if Sun Shuyun had a PhD in history. I do know that she graduated from Beijing University and then won a scholarship to Oxford University (http://www.tantor.com/AuthorDetail.asp?Author=Shuyun_S), two facts which show that she must have done at least some graduate coursework and must also be quite intelligent. I find it frustrating that Sun's academic credentials have been called into question, but not those of the two Salisburys and Dick Wilson. Likewise, citations have been requested for Sun, but not for the others.--] 00:38, 23 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::I don't question Salisbury and Wilson's credencials because there is no question. We don't even know what degree she obtaned from Beijing. For all I know it could be in basket weaving. And a scholarship alone doesnt mean anything. In anycase, another editor changed "academic" to "writer," and she has written on the subject so I'm ok with her views being presented. But, I don't see any evidence for calling her an academic.] 08:34, 23 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::There is just as much reason to question the other authors' credentials. Harrison Salisbury definitely did not have a PhD (look at the links on his Wiki article); he was a reporter. I am near sure that Charlotte Salisbury didn't either. As for Dick Wilson, I can never find much info on him, but I bet he's the same. On other note, I'm fairly sure that they don't have basket weaving at Oxford. If they did, I'm also sure they wouldn't give people scholarships to go there and study it. Sun is certainly not an academic, but she's closer to being one than the Salisburys. All of that being said, I don't think any of these authors should be taken down; I just want there to be a sense of perspective about the whole thing.--] 22:35, 23 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
: I feel like the Li Guixiu quote is unnecessarily long. Couldn't we just include the part about there being a fight at the bridge? That's the only thing that is directly pertinent.--] 22:41, 23 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::I'll cut down the Li quote, although I like the richness of her descriptions that historically set the tone of the times. Its not really too long. About credenials, I never asked who had a PhD. Nor am I arguing that we take any of the authors down. I only wanted to know the credencials of Shuyun, because I have not been able to verify what they were. She was described as an academic, and I didn't see any evidence for that. Hence, the question. Also, winning a scholarhip to Oxford doesnt mean she ever attended the school, nor graduated from there, or obtained any degree or course work--whatever the coursework was. All this is rather academic at this stage, no pun intended.] 22:45, 23 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::There was still more to cut out, so I did. If people want to read the whole story they can via the link. It's not relevant to the discussion as to what the KMT told, what the Communists were wearing on their feet, etc. ] 23:01, 23 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::Giovanni, I gave ground on the last two disputes over content we had. Now it is just down to phrasing - will you never give any ground? ] 23:58, 23 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::If you are still not convinced, look at what the article says. | |||
:::"This week in Luding the Herald could not find the authors' unnamed local source, or anyone who remembered someone of her description. But it did '''find''' Li, whom other locals said was the last surviving witness they knew of in Luding." | |||
:::"Found" is the past tense of "find". If you insist on anything else it shows you are doing so for POV reasons. ] 00:17, 24 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::This is not the only issue/changes you are making. For example, you said she claimed to be 15 at the time. The article does not say she made any such claim. The article states as a fact that she was 15 at the time given her current age.] 00:27, 24 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::We are entitled to our own opinion, but not our own facts. The facts we report on, and factually, I've added to the critical reception of this book. Why do you say it should be only done so 'sparingly"? What I added, by definition, added to the article, so I fail to see your argument to censor the important voices of those that criticize this book. I see above, other editors agreed with me (or I agreed with them, which is why I looked at it and made the changes accordingly). I only see you as the sole editor standing in the way of this progress. I hope you have better arguments for keeping out my additions. Until you do, or there is clearly a consensus against it, I will restore.] (]) 00:46, 9 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
::::Because this is an article on the book, not a collection of every view ever expressed on it. If you want to create an article titled "views on MTUS", you can post to your heart's content. But there has to be balance here, which means limiting views. | |||
== Interviews == | |||
::::Do not misrepresent the comments of others. Other editors supported combining the praise and criticism sections to make them smaller overall. It is you who is working against that by trying to make the sections bigger, not smaller. It is also up to you to change by consensus as you are introducing new material and overturning a long-standing set-up. You should stop reverting - please read the rules I pasted on your talk page. ] (]) 00:52, 9 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
::::If you know the rules, why are you violating them by revering my changes? I do not represent anyone's comments, however it appears you are doing so. See above, I refer to user: Colipon+. This is about the question of balance, as I stated above, and which you have not addressed, yet. Also, please drop the straw-man fallacy about 'every review ever expressed." This is, again, about appropriate balance, and I see more editors agreeing with me than you, the lone voice holding back this change.] (]) 00:56, 9 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
There is no reason to cast doubt about the interviews that Chang and Halliday conducted. Extensive documentation of them is at the end of the book. It seems unlikely that the authors would shoot themselves in the foot by falsely claiming that they interviewed hundreds of people, most of whom are still alive. If they are lying about this, then surely some of the people who weren't interviewed would call them out on such a lie. | |||
Of course, whether the interview material was used in an academically responsible way is another question entirely.--] 08:05, 24 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::It isn't against the rules to disagree with someone and undo their changes - it's against the rules to revert four times in 24 hours. I haven't done that, and I won't revert your changes again for some time if I do at all. So far it's just me and you, so how can editors agree with you before they've even seen what you've done? As I suggest on your talk page I suggest you revert yourself to avoid being reprimanded for breaking the 3RR. ] (]) 01:01, 9 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
: Nevertheless, we have no-one else's but the author's words that they did conduct these interviews. --] (]) 10:59, 24 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::I see. We'll I suggest we allow other editors impute then, before we continue with reverting one way or another. I made changes based on other editors above bringing out these points that I agreed with. The arguments are clear and I found your responses unpersuasive, and saw no other editor agreeing with you. My additions fix a number of problems that have been raised. The issue of making it one section or two is not a problem, and not a major issue (I don't care about that issue). I do care about balance of views reflecting the reality of how this book is reviewed by academics, and not painting a false picture of 'equality.' I also feel that the additions add value in conveying this. Like I said, lets see what other editors say. I will not revert if I am the lone voice here, and since you appear to be so, based on the comments above, I hope you will take the same tact.] (]) 01:09, 9 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
::That is the case with any work, Sumple. It's ridiculous for you to keep insisting all these caveats be attached to any references of the book. You got caught short on the Mao talk page by assuming their reference to Mao not bathing was made up until someone provided the source - why don't you just admit you let your dislike for her influence your editing too much and let this go? ] 12:18, 24 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::I had a discussion with one person, Colipon. No one else commented on what I said, so how can I be the lone voice? We were both the lone voices if anyone was. | |||
::: You are attacking my edits on the basis of my other edits, and some sort of generalising conclusion that I dislike the author - which, in another context, I might say is very Jung Chang-esque of you. It is certainly not good editorship and I warn you to desist before becomes stalking. | |||
::::::Furthermore it was Colipon who suggested merging praise and criticism - I agreed with that. Do you agreee with that? ] (]) 01:23, 9 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
::: You are right that that's the case with any work. However, most other works don't go around claiming that they had access to previously-unseen footage/primary source material (or conducted hundredds of interviews with people whom, somehow, more established authors have failed to notice) without providing this material or at least some means of verifying the material. | |||
:::::::I already commented and have no opinion on merging it into one or not. Again, this is not the issue at hand. Colipon commented on the lopsided balance given by suggesting that both pro and con have equal weight, and which I commented on, above, from both the sections and the header. This view can also be seen in the edit summary, which you reverted, that stated, "The amount of coverage balances the general opinions in the academic world. There has been much more criticism than praise." You reverted it, taking out even more reviews that were critical.] (]) 01:35, 9 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
::: As for "caught short", please explain how I was "caught short". I know Jung Chang says that in her book, and she, as usual, provides some dubious unverified account, and probably neglects any other accounts to the contrary. What you said was very rude of you and I request that you retract it. --] (]) 12:47, 24 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::Oh come now - lots of works uncover new ground. That doesn't mean they must be caveated into oblivion, which is what you keep doing. I am not attacking you just because of other edits you made - I was questioning your objectivity by always believing anything she says is not credible. This goes towards your caveating here. Your assumption that she doesn't try to find views to the contrary isn't terribly relevant on the bathing matter, unless you can find a book written by someone from his entourage that says he did bathe regularly and he wasn't toweled down. | |||
::::You have repeatedly displayed an anti-Chang bias in the past, and you are still doing that now. I will retract my statement when you stop this silly and rather petty qualification of everything she and her husband says. It really is quite ridiculous - I doubt anyone would stand for it on the Iris Chang/Rape of Nanking (book) page. Don't complain that people have talked about the massacre in the past - people have talked about Mao many times too. All books are original and contain new information, unless they are just repeating what others have said. So in that case most books should be caveated to your logic. ] 13:13, 24 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::This, to me, is what the bottom line is. If I write a book and say that I interviewed hundreds of people, and I provide full bibliographic citation for those interviews, then I would have to be unthinkably brazen to just be making it up. All it would take is for one of those hundreds of people to go to a newspaper and say, "I wasn't interviewed," and I immediately lose credibility. I am not aware of one person, not a single person, saying that Chang didn't interview him or her when she claimed to have done so. Unless you find some reason, beyond a general suspicion of the author, to cast aspersion upon the verity of these interviews, then there is absolutely no reason to cast doubt upon the interview claim in this article. | |||
::Do not mistake me for someone who slavishly believes everything Jung Chang says. I am well aware of her compromised academic reputation and often dishonest scholarship. On this particular issue, however, I see no reason to doubt that these interviews occurred. I will eliminate the "claimed" wording within a day unless I see some reason why I should not.--] 16:09, 24 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::::Well I think you should consider an opinion because it will be hard to come up with consensus if we can't even agree the basic structure. Could you agree to use a combined section as a starting point to work on? | |||
::: You miss my point. By ] the onus is not on me to supply sources in order to "cast aspersions", as you put it. The onus is on whoever wrote that to supply a source. As it stands, that sentence is unsourced. I understand that the claim was made by the authors. If you read ] and ], you will note that an inherently unverifiable claim like this will need to be presented with reference to its source material, viz, that the authors claim this. Misplaced Pages policy demands no less. | |||
::::::::Colipon raised a concern and I responded to it. We then posted another comment each - he didn't respond directly to my last point. The conversation moved on to improving the article by a combined section. Which is why I suggest it as a basis to start with. ] (]) 01:39, 9 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
::: Speculation from you or I about whether they would be "brazen" enough to lie about this or exaggerate the level or extent of their research is totally irrelevant. | |||
::: Allow me to present an analogy. Let's say the authors interview and quote Mr Li in the book. That's verifiable information, and in the article we can say "The book interviews and quotes Mr Li ". | |||
::: But here the claim is that they interviewed "hundreds" of people. Are hundreds of people quoted in the book? No. So it's just a claim, no different from any other claim made in the book. | |||
::: You wouldn't say "Mao Zedong is worse than Hitler ". You'd say "The authors conclude/claim that Mao is worse than hitler ." | |||
::: This is no different. --] (]) 01:48, 27 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
I think we should keep it separate because of the length of the its critical reception; this book, it is true, has been blisteringly ridiculed as a monster fairy tale, and looking over the changes, I see most of them as a definite improvement. I don't agree, however, with some of the changes. Raymond Lotta, while an interesting Maoist writer I'm familiar with, in all fairness represents a political fringe. Also it's true the section is getting rather large, although I see this as secondary in import. I do agree with the overall point made by the editor making the changes and not that he/she was actually restoring something that appear to have been taking out without any consensus or discussion, and make other changes that have been suggested as being needed. For example, I note that one editor removed some of the critcal reviews, and then John Smith stated he was reverting that, however, in actuality, he removed even more of the critical reviews, cutting more, and not reverting as stated: http://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Mao%3A_The_Unknown_Story&action=historysubmit&diff=328785074&oldid=328749527 I don't see these changes as discussed or being done with consensus, so restoring it really going back to the long standing version that needs consensus in order to change. I will attempt a compromise edit and try to help out.] (]) 05:21, 9 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
::::The sentence is not unsourced; it takes Chang and Halliday as a source--something obvious enough to the reader. Moreover, you claim that if quotes were provided from these interviews, that that would make them somehow less of a "claim" and more of a "verifiable" fact. This is ridiculous. If the authors made up the interviews, they could make up the wording of the interviews as well. Why not? Moreover, from a cursory look at the text, it is immediately obvious that several dozen of these interviews ARE quoted from. If one were to actually sit down and count them up, I would not be surprised if hundreds of interviewees are quoted in the text. Interviews which aren't quoted from directly would still be used as sources, presumably, and cited appropriately in the end notes. | |||
::::If you want more of a citation for the interviews claim, then perhaps listing the page numbers for the list of interviews would help. It would be clear then that the hundreds of interviews claim comes from the text, not from some Misplaced Pages editor. | |||
::::I find it to be a dangerous game of semantics that you are forcing us to play. I could go on any Misplaced Pages page on a history book and make every single sentence referring to an author's interview say, "The author claims to have talked to..." The claim wording here is so unnecessary that it betrays an obvious bias. If specific pages can be cited to show that hundreds of people were interviewed, then that should be a credible enough citation. If someone within academia challenged such a citation, then that should be mentioned in the next sentence. | |||
::::You wrote today that "Speculation from you or I about whether they would be 'brazen' enough to lie about this or exaggerate the level or extent of their research is totally irrelevant." You obviously don't really believe this, since earlier you wrote, "However, most other works don't go around claiming that they had access to previously-unseen footage/primary source material (or conducted hundredds of interviews with people whom, somehow, more established authors have failed to notice) without providing this material or at least some means of verifying the material." If this isn't you analysis of the likelihood of the interviews having occurred, then I don't know what it is. I should also note that earlier you assumed that Chang wasn't "providing this material or at least some means of verifying the material"--something which isn't true, since she does give all of this bibliographic information. It is clear that these sort of assumptions that you make about Chang's reliability are causing bias to seep into your edits. --] 08:13, 27 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
As a graduate student in Modern Chinese History, I can safely say that users such as Colipon understand the matter most clearly. To quote another intelligent reader above, "I'd like to point out that "balance" should not falsely imply "equality' but reflect the fact that the amount of coverage should balance the general opinions in the academic world". Without sounding condascending, user John Smith's is substantially incorrect to state "only a tiny number of academics have given any feedback on this book. Your opinion is that, an opinion, even if you feel you are 100% right." In actual fact, this is not opinion, but established concensus among specialists. If you do the appropriate research, you and any other rational reader will come to the same conclusion. Particularly glaring is the belief that a "tiny number" of academics have weighed in. In actual fact, teh academic response to this book has been overwhelming and significantly broader than the average publication, even of scholarly stature. In fact, I have not in my studies ever seen anything quite like it. Perhaps you are not aware of the amount of reviews it has received. I would politely ask you to turn to an excellent historiographic essay written in 2006 by PhD student Brent Haas (http://orpheus.ucsd.edu/chinesehistory/pgp/brentmaoessay.htm) for an overview. Since that time, even more criticism has poured out of the academy. For these reasons, I have corrected the lead section of the article with what is currently accepted among historians, and added a new paragraph to the criticism section which I suggest you consult for recent additions to the debate. I strongly suggest that any future reversions be tempered by the necessary research and not personal affront at changes made to a public article. ] (]) 07:46, 30 March 2010 (UTC) | |||
:::::Whether I have a bias against Chang is irrelevant - my argument is based on policy. I don't understand your argument about the biliographical information. What does that have to do with conducting interviews? The last time I checked, ] is about books, not people. Do you mean biographical? | |||
::::: Again, it doesn't matter whether I don't believe the claim, or whether you believe the claim. It is a claim, it should not be presented as fact unless it is verifiable. It is not verifiable, therefore it should not be presented as fact. | |||
::::: It's simple enough. That's how Misplaced Pages runs. --] (]) 10:11, 27 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
===Two cents=== | |||
:::::: When I say that Chang provides "bibliographic" information, I am referring to her use of proper citation format (as in, the proper citation format for a bibliography), as defined by the standards of academic writing, to describe her interview sources. | |||
*About the lede: calling anything "" should be avoided, it's simply poor style (almost as bad as writing an article about a person and saying "Joe Schmoe is a ''notable'' X"...it's very wiki-internal language, and doesn't benefit the reader). If the controversy surrounding something is noteworthy, work it into the article itself, and perhaps later in the lede say something like "X generated controversy because of its Y"; that sounds much better, and isn't inherently POV like the other wording. (For an example off the top of my head, see '']''—there was some controversy about this film, but the lede of the article never says "''Not One Less'' is a controversial film about...".) For what it's worth, the previously-existing version that 76.14.42.191 was replacing this edit ("''Mao...'' is an 832-page-long book") was also junk, but for different reasons. I have the opening sentence to make it simpler and avoid unnecessary qualifiers. | |||
:::::: Chang's claim that she conducted hundreds of interviews is as verifiable as any other claim that a scholar makes while providing full citation of the source. In other words, it's pretty damn verifiable; that's the point of a citation. If the interviews that she conducted aren't verifiable, then I would like to know if there's a single interview in the scope of human history that you would consider verifiable. | |||
*About the reviews: there is already a problem in the article, which is that there seems to have been a propensity to devote entire paragraphs to individual reviews, making the article difficult to read. Adding even more large paragraphs for one or two reviews () is not helping the situation (see ]). What really needs to be done to clean this up is to sit down and make an outline and determine what the major points (of both praise and criticism) in the reviews are, and then ''briefly'' cite the various reviews that fit under each point. These 'critical reception' sections should be organized around the points, not organized around the reviewers. That's more reader-friendly: the readers care what the major points were, they generally don't care who the reviewers are. That sort of organization will also cut down on length and dryness, which currently is a weakness in the article—a lot of readers, myself included, simply don't bother to sit down and read through the whole thing because it's boringly written and rambles on and on. <b class="Unicode">]</b> <small><sup>]</sup>/<sub>]</sub></small> 06:30, 9 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
:::::: To put it simply, explain in clear words what the difference is, to you, between a verifiable and an unverifiable interview. An example would also be appreciated. Explain what exactly is so inadequate about Chang's method of documenting her interviews. What would she had to have to done to convince you that these interviews are "verifiable"? --] 12:11, 27 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:I agree with both your points. We shouldn't include reviewers for the sake of it, and I think a combined section would do this well. It's too long as it is. ] (]) 13:51, 9 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
::::::: Note: I am saying the ''claim of hundreds'' (which I will use henceforth as shorthand for the authors' claim that they conducted hundreds of interviews) is unverifiable, not the interviews themselves - as to that I make no assertion. | |||
::::::: This, in my opinion, is the difference between a "verifiable claim of hundreds" and an "unverifiable claim of hundreds": Verifiable means there is sufficient information for a third party to ascertain the truth of the claim, and unverifiable means there isn't. Please see Misplaced Pages policy at ] for where I got that idea from. | |||
::::::: '''Verifiable''': the author provides information sufficient to verify that the interviews took place: "I interviewed 256 respondents in preparing this work, and their names and location are listed below: A. A. Aardvark, Helsinki. Bill Abs, Trenton NJ ... " | |||
::::::: '''Verifiable''': the author asserts that he conducted hundreds of interviews, and a reliable, independent third party source, say a documentary maker who followed him around, agrees. | |||
::::::: '''Verifiable''': the author asserts that he conducted hundreds of interviews, and he quotes or otherwise mentions a sufficiently large number of them, and in doing so, provides enough information that a sufficiently well-resourced and motivated third party can, using this information, establish whether not such a number of interviews took place. | |||
::::::: '''Unverfiable''': the author asserts that he conducted hundreds of interviews, without more. | |||
::::::: '''Unverfiable''': the author asserts that he conducts hundreds of interviews, but quotes or mentions only a handful of those interviewees, although he provides sufficient information to verify that those particular interviews took place. | |||
::::::: '''Unverifiable''': the author asserts that he conducts hundreds of interviews, and quotes or mentions a large number of those interviewees, ''but'' provides so little information that whether those interviews took place, and whether the state total number of interviews took place, cannot be verified. E.g. if many interviewees are identified only by name. | |||
::::::: You are probably thinking "but no author would provide a list of interviewees like that!" And you might be right. But unless they provide information to verify that hundreds of interviews like that, it is not a verifiable claim and under Misplaced Pages policy, that's what we treat it as: an unverfiable claim, with appropriate source quoted and appropriate qualification ("the author claims") added. | |||
::::::: My assertion is that Chang & Halliday's claim falls within the second or the third type of "unverifiable" which I placed above. I know you said that they provided full citations for the interviews they quoted. However, assuming this information is sufficient to verify these interviews, even if they do this for, say, 50 interviewees, that is still a long way from "hundreds". | |||
::::::: Again, I should add that adding the qualification ("the authors claim") is not intended to imply that they lied, but is in my opinion what is required by Misplaced Pages's Verifiability policy. When I said earlier that "if they had quoted hundreds of people that would be okay", what I meant was that if they had quoted hundreds of people that would be prima facie evidence that they ''did'' in fact interview hundreds of people. However, ultimately it comes down to verifiability. | |||
::::::: So I guess what I'd like to know is: | |||
::::::: (1) whether you think I erred in my interpretation of Misplaced Pages's verifiable facts policy, and if so, where; | |||
::::::: (2) whether you think that, despite the above interpretation being correct, I erred in placing Chang & Halliday's "claim of hundreds" in the "unverfiable" category, and if so, why. --] (]) 07:10, 28 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::: I have not been a Misplaced Pages editor for long enough to feel comfortable making any claim about (1). That being said, I think that (2) is where I disagree with you. According to the criteria that you have listed, the hundreds of interviews are verifiable. Have you ever looked at the list of interviews in the back of the book? I have. I unfortunately don't have the book in front of my face at the moment, but I can promise you that the list of interviews is between 10 to 20 pages long, perhaps longer. It certainly contains hundreds of citations. The citation for these interviews is scrupulous and meets academic standards; a determined third party could investigate these claims and determined their truth. Finally, I am quite sure that hundreds of interviews are either directly quoted or cited in the endnotes, proving that the interview material was put to good use. --] 09:19, 28 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::Ok, I'll take these points under consideration and attempt to go back at the bat with some of my own changes that reflect this, and still incorporate some of the good changes that were made earlier. But, my point, which seems to escape people here is that the changes that I restored were the original, long standing version already, and those things were taken out without any discussion and hence no consensus. So, to keep things the way they were, the consensus version, is to not revert it back to what it is now, but to what it was before taking out the critical section reviews! I'll try to trim it down, anyway, but it seems to me that taking several out completely to make it the same size as the praise section amounts to whitewashing, creating the false appearance of equity between pro/con, and leaves the reader not getting a clear sense of the utter devistating nature of those critical reviews, which accurately reflects the opinion of the academy.] (]) 19:31, 9 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
:::::::: I don't have the book in front of me, and I don't think I paid attention to the list the last time I looked at the book. So I will defer to what you said. I'll get back to you after I've looked it up. --] (]) 12:03, 28 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
I'm glad to see more discussion and progress being made. I can live with the changes and I mostly agree with the other IP user, above. Although, I will say that I disagree about the Lotta removal (although I can live with it, if other editors don't agree with me). My point for including the Lotta review was to simply have the full spectrum of views represented, and to counter the message that "everyone views Mao as a monster' which would not be accurate, Lotta being a case in point. But, I wont re-insert that without getting consensus as I think that is the proper way to go about this. I'm glad the other parts were restored, since as you point out, they were removed without discussion in the first place.] (]) 22:20, 9 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
::::::::: That sounds fair. Thanks. --] 14:50, 28 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
I did a little trimming and moving around, adding spacing and italics. I also found redundancies, even references that were repeated with the same content, which I removed, of course. I went back into the earlier versions and found some better wordings, as well. I look forward to comments about my changes. I think its easier to read now, and gives the proper weight/balance to the respective sections.] (]) 22:59, 9 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
This sounds very heated but I think in a way you are both right. It is no secret that JC and Halliday have been interviewing people in China for the best part of a decade - anyone working in the field has been hearing about their interviews for years. My point is that she may have carried out the interviews but has chosen not to include thier line of argument or views. The case I know of is that of Prof Frederick Teiwes who was interviewed but disagreed radically with JC's arguments. This was not reflected in the book. Another point is the system of referencing - the referencing system simply does not allow for an easy checking of sources. therefore the interviews may have taken place but what was siad is unavailable. On the question of accuracy - there is a claim in the book that JC remembers most of a multi-page handwritten note and replicates this from memory. That's something I find hard to believe! | |||
:What did Rjiang say about not making changes without reaching consensus first? We should reset the page to his version and use a sandox. That's the best way to reach consensus without disruption. ] (]) 23:17, 9 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
: Thank you for your opinion; I've found it helpful. If you could give us a source for the anecdote about the handwritten note, that would be helpful. It seems like a good thing to include on the page. | |||
: As far as proper citation of interviews, this is what the most recent edition of the MLA handbook had to say: "To cite an interview that you conducted, give the name of the person interviewed, the kind of interview (Personal interview, Telephone interview, E-mail interview), and the date or dates" (203). Chang certainly provides all of this. The problem of not knowing the specific conversation that took place is rather moot, since a transcript of an interview is not a requirement for proper academic citation. This applies both to hack writers, like Chang, and well-respected scholars, like Jonathan Spence. --] 02:50, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::Yes, but has been pointed out by others, the restored material was in the article recently and recently taken out by you, and so by this same logic it should stay back in until there is this 'consensus" right? You can't take out material and then say to put it back in requires us to work in the sandbox first. What kind of logic is that? ] (]) 23:20, 9 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
==Latest additions== | |||
:::It was in the article recently because it was '''added recently'''. Someone had tried to jam it all in ages ago, but that was rejected not long after. The consensus was that it would stay out. That's the logic behind it. ] (]) 23:25, 9 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
And, I'm referring to this, where a section of the critical reviews were taking out: and then followed by your edit which claimed to 'revert" however, instead of actually reverting what you did was take out ''even more'' sourced material from only the critical section: So restoring this material under there is a discussion and consensus seems to be what you are saying is the proper thing to do.] (]) 23:25, 9 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
:And it is just the "small bit" about this book, which I include and which you removed. The article, though is about the content of this conference, and the results of the academics who talked about this book. Their comments, which are referenced, are therefore properly mentioned here in this section. They are qualified academics in the field of China Studies and you can't remove them simply because you don't like their POV. The wording is: | |||
:The material I removed on 30th November was added '''the same day''', also being text that a now banned user had added in multiple times in an attempt to keep in. So how did its inclusion on 30th November become consensus in less than 24 hours? ] (]) 23:29, 9 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
...the Chang and Halliday book was discussed by Professor of Chinese Studies Gao Mobo and Professor of Asian Studies, Kaz Ross, who advanced the opinion that ''"the Chang-Halliday book was only the latest in the genre of "faction" -- fiction with a cloak of facts." ''] 09:11, 26 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::If that is true, I stand corrected, however, I don't see it as being true. Please show me the link where the same material that both you and the other editor took out on Nov. 30th, was actually something new that was inserted that same day. If you can show me that, then I would have been mistaken about this. However, even is this is true, I think its more helpful to address the actual arguments instead of best procedure, about what was first, etc. Lets talk about the arguments, which has been made, i.e. that the criticism section should be larger than the praise section and to make the the same would be to give undue weight by making both praise and negative reception look as if they were equal, then that is hardly the case.] (]) 00:59, 10 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
:::I'll try to explain again. Someone inserted this material (or stuff very similar to it) quite some time ago - over a year I think. It was disputed very quickly and didn't stay in. For a year or more it wasn't there. On 30th someone tried to add it back in. I removed it on the same day. Is that clear? It never became part of a consensus version of the page so by removing it I cannot have been undoing any consensus. ] (]) 01:21, 10 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
::"The School of Asian languages and Studies" - why not the History faculty? | |||
::Look, I think you're taking things a bit far. The first seems to teach the Chinese language and some other things, the second politics and society. Neither of these people have written any books about Mao from those links, nor are they historians. Those are throw-away comments that do nothing to improve the article. Just because it's a brief reference doesn't mean it should be included. I let the Pomfret thing go because he had something worthwhile to say - this is completely different. ] 09:35, 26 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::Ok, I really needed to see the links to see what you were talking about, but I went back more carefully to take a look and you are party right, and I'm party right. What was really new materially that was inserted was the section by Historian Li Yongzhong from Taiwan, and so I will remove that to show good faith with the process. However, there are other sections that were removed and was NOT part of that new edition on that day, so that is what caught my attention.] (]) 01:41, 10 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
:::Asian Studies is the appropriate field, which encompases Chinese History. You say he teaches "some other things." Well those other things make him quite qualified. These two academics, in fact, are more qualifed than Pomfret, which you accept. To review these "other things": | |||
:::::The section on Gao Mobo '''was''' added on 30th November - . So according to your own logic that should be removed as well. ] (]) 01:46, 10 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
:::''"Dr. M Gao studied at various universities including Wales, Westminster and Cambridge and holds degrees from Xiamen and Essex. Gao is a frequent speaker on topics of...contemporary '''Chinese politics''' and culture at universities such as Oxford, Harvard, Washington Seattle, Hong Kong and mainland China. He has appeared on ABC radio and BBC television and radio commenting on '''China and Chinese affairs'''. He has published many research articles in international journals in English and Chinese. His recent publications include three books, Gao Village: Rural Life in Modern China...Dr. Mobo Gao's research interest includes contemporary '''Chinese politics''', Chinese language and grammar, the '''Chinese Cultural Revolution''', rural China, ethnic issues in China, media studies '''(Western reporting of China)''' and cultural studies.''I also note that his published works, are an assigned textsbook in History courses, such as the highly regarded Reed College's Hist 320 | |||
::::::I see that Gao was there before, though, and not sure why it was taken out. Also, I noticed that several editors allowed that to stay in, not to mention the one who put it back on Nov. 30th, with editor Rjanag, keeping it, consolidating it, and editor Colipon opposing your removal of it. With me and the other IP editors, that makes a pretty strong agreement to keep it--(I count 5 again 1).I removed the other addition since i did not see that there before. I think the part by Prof. Gao is a strong criticism, and therefore we should keep the strongest parts, no?] (]) 01:57, 10 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
:::::::You can read the archives for the exact reasons, but it was removed. It also was not reinserted. And just because someone did not remove it immediately does not mean they wanted to have it in. You cannot use silence to mean someone wants something. But in any case, . It is gained through page stability. It remains a fact that the Gao Mobo spiel never gained consensus as part of the page. If you want to discuss its inclusion towards getting consensus, that's fine. But it is wrong to put it in and then demand we get consensus given that might take some time to do. ] (]) 02:20, 10 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::But consensus can't mean that everyone had to agree 100% either, right? If 5 or 6 editors agree with something and you are the only one who doesnt agree with it, and you can't convince others with a good argument, then is it right to say it can't be included because you don't also agree, ultimately with the change? I think in such a situation, you have to agree that consensus means most editors want something, not everyone 100%. Ultimately, I think it comes down more to the arguments being made then the numbers game, though.] (]) 08:55, 10 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
You still haven't answered my question about what Rjiang said about making changes without getting consensus here. ] (]) 23:31, 9 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
:::''"Prof. Kaz Ross was educated at the University of Melbourne. Before joining the School in August 2004 she taught at the University of Melbourne, RMIT and Swinburne University in a range of subject areas including social and political theory, '''Chinese studies''', '''Asian studies''' and media studies. Kaz’s research interests...revolve around China....She has been a visiting scholar at Peking University, and an editor of the Melbourne Journal of Politics."'' These qualifications give them the right to have their views on this book included.] 17:51, 26 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::I accepted Pomfret because you kept bashing on about how his book was all about Mao. I did not say I thought he was qualified simply because he writes on China. Unless you can show me a book on Mao these guys have written I will additionally object on the same grounds I originally objected to Pomfret. But more importantly, as I keep pointing out, they haven't written a review - just made a throw-away comment that adds nothing to the page. ] 17:57, 26 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::Giovanni you ignored my post - please reply separately and address the points. ] 18:32, 26 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::The qualifications of these academics stand for themselves. Their published writings, many of which are assigned texts within university History courses on China, are plain to anyone to bothers to look. You call their comments "throw-away," and "adds nothing," but I disagree. They addressed the book and dismissed the book. That is their POV, and that is an important POV which adds a lot, in my opinion. But its not our POV that matters, its a question of reporting qualified academics within the field of China Studies, who do speak about this book, and report what they say when they address this book--like it or not.] 18:36, 26 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::I've made my point, but you're ignoring it. There's no more point debating it here. ] 19:10, 26 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:I agree. Lets have consensus first before taking out what was already there, below, and which was taken out by yourself without getting that consensus. So are we in agreement and that won't be taken out again without consensus this time? Its restored now. The other minor changes don't seem to be in dispute, but lets talk about that here before anything else. I don't think a sandbox is necessary since we are not talking about a complete re-write, but if so, yes, lets use the sandbox for that purpose.] (]) 00:57, 10 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
I think we need to get input from the other interested editors on this point and then agree to abide by consensus. If we don't get inpute we can seek a Rfc.] 00:27, 27 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:Perhaps it would be faster if we got a few uninvolved editors/admins to tell us what they think. But if you want to go by consensus, you need to say what that is first (i.e. how you will find it). ] 00:34, 27 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:What exactly is the definition of a "throw-away" comment? (Forgive my ignorance.)--] 00:39, 27 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::Heh, not sure I can explain easily. Just that it's an unimportant or quickly-thought-up statement that adds little to the topic. ] 00:43, 27 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::Well, you should be able to explain it since that is the basis of your argument. You say its "quickly-thought-up." What evidence do you have to support this claim? And, even if it were true that their opinion about this book was "quickly thought up" how is that a valid standard to employ for determining its acceptable use or not? Last time I checked it was not how quickly a respected academic came up with a POV, it was their credencials to be able to properly speak on the question at hand that mattered. In this case, professors of Asian and China Studies, of which they are. I challenged you to cite the policy whereby we are to use your standard of "quickly thought up" as a reason to exclude.] 03:57, 27 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:I'm going to have to take the stance that the quote should be included. I see no reason not to. <small>—The preceding ] comment was added by ] (] • ]) 07:20, 27 March 2007 (UTC).</small><!-- HagermanBot Auto-Unsigned --> | |||
::::Giovanni, don't play semantics. I've said several times that I'm objecting because they're not historians, they haven't written books on Mao and their comments are brief and not nearly useful enough to warrant a place. Just because they teach stuff on China doesn't mean they're qualified to comment. ] 08:54, 27 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::Quite frankly, these two scholars are as qualified to make their comments as Chang and Halliday were to write their book (neither Chang nor Halliday is a Chinese historian by training, education, or background). If we are to let Chang and Halliday have their say on Misplaced Pages (and we should), then we should allow similarly qualified detractors or supporters have their own say as well. --] 12:16, 27 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::First of all Halliday is a historian. But more importantly the two are qualified because they have researched the book and explained their position in detail. That is not the case with the others - there is no evidence they have researched Mao themselves and are just throwing in cheap comments with no basis. ] 13:47, 27 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::: Gao and Ross were not just speaking off the cuff--they were delivering a paper at an academic conference on the topic of historical representation of Mao. I am sure that they must have researched Mao if they were in such a position as to give this presentation at a conference. | |||
::::::: In fairness, I think the quote from the webpage should be elongated to include the bit about how Ross thinks the Cultural Revolution is a good thing. This clearly biases his perspective against the mainstream of Chinese historical studies, not just Chang. It is important to see that the presenters are so far to the left as to support the Cultural Revolution, because it means that from a more moderate historical perspective, their opinion is compromised. (To use a cumbersome analogy, it would be like a Holocaust denier giving a bad review of a biography on Hitler; most historians and laymen would take such a review with a grain of salt.) --] 17:24, 27 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::::While I agree with you regarding the inclusion of the quotes about this book made by these academics, I don't think we need to try to 'bias" the reader because of other "left" possitions they take. We can characterize their work, if they are out of the mainstream, but we have to be careful how we do it. I prefer simply to attach the links. I don't think your characterization of them are accurate. I dispute that they "support" the CR; they take a mixed, nuanced view, looking at the positives and negatives of this complex period (the complete opposite of the simplisitic methodology employed by Chang). If you read his actual paper on the CR, which I've looked at, you'd find his overall assessment is in line with the consensus among China Studies, i.e., a negative one but not in white and black terms. His POV is well within the bounds of what is regarded as legitimate in the field, unlike some revisionist Holocaust Denier. Thus that analogy is not a valid one.] 18:02, 27 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::For those interested here are some scholarly publications by Dr. Gao that are peer reviewed, concerning the CR, which support my assesement, above: | |||
:::::::::*Gao, Mobo C. F. "Maoist Discourse and a Critique of the Present Assessments of the Cultural Revolution." Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars 26.3 (1994); | |||
:::::::::*"Memoirs and Interpretation of the Cultural Revolution." Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars 27.1 (1995); | |||
:::::::::*"Debating the Cultural Revolution: Do We Only Know What We Believe?" Critical Asian Studies, Vol. 34, No. 3 (September 2002). | |||
:::::::::Other notable facts are that he is reguarly featured in scholarly conferences on this topic, and required reading in history courses within highly esteemed colleges and universities. For example: ''"Roundtable: China Studies 40 Years After the Cultural Revolution Discussants: '''Mobo Gao, University of Tasmania,''' Australia; Emily Honig, University of California at Santa Cruz; Dongping Han, Warren Wilson College; Zheng Wang, University of Michigan; Michael Dutton, University of Melbourne, Australia; Gary Sigley, University of Western Australia, Australia 2006 marks the 40th anniversary of an event that has profoundly affected both the P.R.C. and China Studies’ understanding of the Mao and post-Mao era: the Cultural Revolution. This international roundtable '''brings together distinguished scholars of both the era and of the field of China Studies itself''', to reflect on current CR scholarship and its consequences for our knowledge of China and for China Studies.''See: http://www.aasianst.org/absts/2006abst/China/C-108.htm] 19:20, 27 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::: Impressive research. I'll have to rescind what I said about them being out of the mainstream. I personally would vigorously disagree with their conclusions, but that has no bearing on whether they are credible academics or whether their perspective on Chang should be included. --] 19:35, 27 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::For the last time, the changes you and the other IP editor have made are the new, significant changes Rjiang was talking about. I didn't remove anything that had been in the page for a long time and part of consensus. So it should go back to his last edit and we can work from there. | |||
Well I still don't think it should go in - maybe you should start an RfC. ] 18:29, 27 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::A sandbox is more preferable because it avoids accusations of edit warring. ] (]) 01:21, 10 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
:That won't be necessary if we get the other editors who usually edit here to give their opinion. You can send them messages and alert them of this issue. Then you will have to abide by the consensus of the editors, so the page can be unlocked. If you still dispute it you can seek a Rfc, instead of edit waring.] 18:56, 27 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::I have been told many times that consensus isn't the same as a super-majority. ] 19:28, 27 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::No, but its something that you are supposed to respect in terms of not edit waring, and if you want you can seek a Rfc. I have notified other editors who have been involved and interested in editing on China issues. If there is a consensus to keep, I think you should not remove it until you get consensus to do so. This is so we can get this page unlocked.] 19:36, 27 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::It isn't actually something I am supposed to expect. Misplaced Pages asks that consensus is gained, which can't happen if people don't agree with the outcome. "Voting" is useful to see if there is consensus, but not to gain it. ] 19:57, 27 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::Consensus is general agreement, not absolute. If you are the only one objecting, your supposed to accept the results of general consensus in so far as that means not making the contested change to the article until such general consensus changes. I am willing to abide by consensus, why can't you say the same?] 20:26, 27 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::According to wikipedia consensus is not general and there is no obligation to accept the result. How can I accept consensus if there is none? Giovanni, I don't know - maybe it's because I'm tired of always agreeing to whatever it is you want. Maybe it would be nice for you to agree to what I want. ] 20:39, 27 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::I gave it a rough count:Under ''Praise'':24 lines, and under ''Criticism'':50 lines, it is time to reduce it's size, before it gets bigger.<i><b><small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">]</span></small> ]</b></i> 01:59, 10 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
Given the evidence Giovanni has provided, it would seem the two people are scholarly sources. John Smith's, is there some WP policy out there that states that an academic must have had written a book about a subject before they are considered credible sources? Or what is your objection in light of what Giovanni has provided as the two people's knowledge of Mao and modern China? ] <small>(] - ])</small> 04:18, 28 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::Yes, that is about the correct weight for pro/con for this book, although I do think it can be trimmed further. My main issue was not to give the false impression of parity between critics and praise. I suppose we can state that, but its best to allow the strongest voices to be the ones presented, or make more clearly the division between the initial popular press and the later specialists who poured in on mass critical of this "history." For me this is more about being accurate as it is about being pretty.] (]) 02:05, 10 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
::::"The correct weight for the pro/con" for this book is subjective. We cannot and should not try to enter a numbers game about pro/con views. We should keep it simple. ] (]) 02:22, 10 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
:For the record, I support the current version and support an expanded section that shows the critical reviews as being the predominant reaction of this book from the academic community. Its not subject, its really the reality.] (]) 03:51, 10 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
:I have lots of other "scholarly sources" I could have added - but I chose not to, rather than spam the sub-section. There is no policy as you mention, but Giovanni seems to keep changing the goalposts. First he said Pomfret was ok because he was a China commentator and had written on Mao - now it seems to be that these guys are ok because they teach subjects related to Chinese politics. I think that is far too tenuous a link. Just because you are a "scholar" doesn't mean you actually know that much about the matter in question. ] 15:24, 28 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::Thanks. It just occurred to me that there is no reason to limit information on wikipedia, since as I read somewhere on one of the policy pages, WP is not paper. However, articles should be kept to a recommended size, and if a section is deemed as getting too big, then there is still no reason to not report on that info. What I mean is that, if it gets too big we can simply export the section to its own daughter article that the main article links, to, i.e. "critical reception and debate." This means we keep the section small, with listing only the best reviews that capture best the points of criticism and praise, while linking to the daughter article that can take up a whole article to exhaust the full extend of the source and discussion around this controversial book. Anyway, just an idea I had reading WP boards. Wondering what people might think of this idea?I generally like more info than less, and this would cure my not liking to delete info.] (]) 06:54, 10 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
::So basically you still think these two people are not credible enough to be added to the article, is that the gist of it? ] <small>(] - ])</small> 15:30, 28 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::It isn't as simple as saying whether they're "credible" - I'm sure they know a lot about Chinese language & politics. But have they done any hard research into Mao like Pomfret? They're not historians - being an academic isn't the same. | |||
:::In addition I feel that such short comments seem to be a reaction to the book itself rather than by a thorough assessment of its content - they're like soundbites to me. The article isn't a review, it's a summary of some sort of meeting. Also there is no information on what other people said at the time, whether these people have read the book, etc. The comments are just too vague and don't have enough context. ] 15:57, 28 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::So you feel they are not reliable sources because they're not academically trained historians? ] <small>(] - ])</small> 16:08, 28 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::That is not a reason to ignore what someone has to say. I made it quite clear in my last message. | |||
:::::They're not historians, they haven't written and researched on Mao, the comments in the article are not nearly detailed enough to understand what their justifications and thoughts, there's no evidence they've even read the book and the article was a summary of a conference, not giving voice to the opinions of any others. That's just based on what I know so far. You don't need to have all those things dealt with, but given none of them are addressed I'm not happy with admitting them at the moment. ] 16:19, 28 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::So you feel a person must have written about Mao in order to be admitted as sources of commentary on ''Mao: The Unknown Story''? ] <small>(] - ])</small> 16:37, 28 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::Hong, I have made my views quite clear - I won't repeat myself again. ] 16:41, 28 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::::Actually I'm not sure under what criteria you do not think the two scholars are not reliable sources. There does not seem to be any policy that an academic be historians (academically trained or not) to be allowed as sources on a an article about a biographical book. I don't know if they've researched specifically about Mao himself, but their credentials show that they have researched on modern Chinese history. Similarly, a couple of the commentors that are included in the article, Perry Link and Michael Yahuda, do not seem to have written specifically about Mao, but they have obviously done research on modern Chinese history. ] <small>(] - ])</small> 16:55, 28 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::The two guys you mentioned have provided detailed reviews - these two people have provided a soundbite - it's not the same. Every comment we have had so far is from a proper review, bar Short who I think is ok as he wrote directly on Mao himself. Also the institutions they study at are wildly different - Princeton and LSE, versus the University of Tasmania. | |||
:::::::::I have also re-checked the article. It appears these two people were the only ones attending the discussion, and there are no comments from Gao (so why should he be mentioned?). Only Ross is mentioned, and given the very loaded question mentioned I think the references are also highly POV now. At best the article is reporting on what it wants to put across - at worst this "discussion" was a thinly veiled artifical attempt to attack the book (the publisher is linked to the group that set up this conference). ] 18:02, 28 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::That's a good point that Gao and Ross didn't actually write reviews of the book. But it's a highly POV to imply that Link and Yahuda are more credible because they are associated with Princeton and LSE respectively. Actually, looking at Yahuda's list of publications and professional bio, I think he's less qualified of a historian than Gao and Ross. ] <small>(] - ])</small> 19:56, 28 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::Ok, maybe there's a little bit of snobbery over their universities. But M. Yahuda does work in international and Chinese politics, whereas Gao as I said seems to focus on Chinese language. ] 22:50, 28 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::You are ignoring all the evidence I provided which shows that Prof. Gao is also quite distinguished as a scholar on Chinese Studies, which include Chinese politics and history. Some of his texts are even assigned in university history courses. Thus, his opinon is notable. Stop pretending you don't see that.] 23:06, 28 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::I am now in communications with the Professor who authored the article, and he is putting me in contact with Prof. Gao and the organizer of the conference. I will attempt to obtain the actual papers and discussion by these two academics so that we would be able to quote them directly. I'll keep you posted on what I am able to obtain from them.] 22:48, 28 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
Take a look at this short professional bio of Gao - | |||
:''Dr M Gao studied at various universities including Wales, Westminster and Cambridge and holds degrees from Xiamen and Essex. Gao is a frequent speaker on topics of Chinese language and contemporary Chinese politics and culture at universities such as Oxford, Harvard, Washington Seattle, Hong Kong and mainland China. He has appeared on ABC radio and BBC television and radio commenting on China and Chinese affairs. He has published many research articles in international journals in English and Chinese. His recent publications include three books, Gao Village: Rural Life in Modern China (1999), An Introduction to Mandarin Chinese (2000) and A Reference Grammar of Mandarin Chinese (2000)'' | |||
I don't think he'd be invited to speak at schools like Oxford and Harvard on contemporary Chinese politics if he was not considered knowledgeable in the subject, or invited to speak on major media outlets like ABC and NBC, for that matter. And take a look at his list of publication. He has written exhaustively on non-language related articles about China. Ok, it still doesn't look like he ''wrote'' a published article about this book. But just looking at his professional body of work, he is ''easily'' more or at least as credible a source as Yahuda. And you talked about how Gao and Ross are not historians - well it looks like neither is Yahuda a historian and he hasn't written books on Mao either. He's a scholar on international relations. ] <small>(] - ])</small> 23:09, 28 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::First of all, Gao's bibliography as you list isn't impressive - again, it seems to be about Chinese language. Let's also remember that we're not talking about contemporary Chinese history, are we? Also, as I said before, the article has no quotes from him. ] 23:14, 28 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::And it would appear that Yahuda's biliography is even less impressive than that of Gao's. I'm trying to establish exactly what criteria you're using where Yahuda qualifies but Gao does not. We're not talking about international relations either, so should we take Yahuda out? ] <small>(] - ])</small> 23:17, 28 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::"International relations" is a generic title - much of his work is on China, as you can see from his bibliography. He has also written a detailed review of the book in question for a broadsheet newspaper. Neither Gao nor Ross have done that. Plus how is Gao's bibliography more impressive - his university page says he has only written three books recently, two on Mandarin Chinese. ] 23:23, 28 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::You ignore two other books he is working on: ''Gao Village: Rural Life since 1996'', And, '' The Cultural Revolution: A Debate.''This means that MOST of the books he has or is working on is NOT about language, but about China's politics and its history. When you add this to his many other published historical and political articles about China in peer reviewed academic journals, then his qualifications are beyond question.] 00:27, 29 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::You can say the same thing about Gao. As you can see from his bibliography, much of his work is on China. And maybe Yahuda's bibliography is missing something, but he hasn't written ''any'' books. His writing has all been articles for journals and magazines. ] <small>(] - ])</small> 00:13, 29 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
== Authors' response to criticism == | |||
::Dr. Gao wrote me, and informs me that is he working on a book on Mao, the man: ''"I have been writing a book on the topic of Mao the man, the Cultural Revolution, the Mao era and the post-Mao reform. In that book I will have two chapters detailing criticism of Mao the Unknown story and their sensationalist claims. You can quote me if you want: the book is NOT scholarship by any meaningful standard, it is a fiction dressed up as history."] 15:31, 3 April 2007 (UTC)'' | |||
Colipon blanked this section for what I take to be a dubious reason (I restored it). It isn't tit-for-tat, it goes to show that they were at least aware of the criticisms made and weren't completely ignoring them. One of the criticisms made was that they had not bothered to say anything in response. | |||
== Page protected due to edit warring == | |||
Moreover the response to Nathan's article '''was''' substantial - it is only that their response has not been repeated here in any detail. Maybe the points made in their letter should be at least summarised in the article. ] (]) 14:59, 5 April 2010 (UTC) | |||
This page is now protected due to edit warring. Please discuss the issue then ] once you've reached a decision on what to do. --] ] 22:57, 26 March 2007 | |||
:All it said was that they did ten years of research, and they are using that as an explanation for their conclusions. It's not a significant response. If the response to the Nathan article was significant, it should still be worked into the section about Nathan's article above, not have its standalone section. ]+<small>(])</small> 15:04, 5 April 2010 (UTC) | |||
I cannot believe the amount of bias held in this article (and even more bias held in the book itself). Please, go ask a team of historians, I don't care if they're western or Chinese, to go and examine the authenticity and credibility of the book. I can write you a book with 10 years of research about how Deng Xiaoping's reforms were bad for Chinese society and the world, and about how ] had sex with singer ]. I can portray Deng and Jiang as even more evil and despicable than Mao. But what the hell is the point? What is history when it only portrays a historical personality in a singular, narrow-minded fashion? ]+(]) 04:57, 28 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::It's not a standalone section - it's a sub-section. And if the response to Nathan's article was added in (with detail) it to the criticism section it would make it even larger, something that should be avoided. The only way it could be merged if the entire "review" section was merged, which there does not appear to be a consensus to do. ] (]) 15:22, 5 April 2010 (UTC) | |||
: I don't understand what your complaint exactly is. How can you say this article is biased in favor of the book when multiple source discrediting the book are referred to? Please try to be more constructive in your criticism. --] 14:48, 28 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::Today, I spent some time to read the entire Nathan critique and the responses from Chang and Halliday, as well as the counter-response from Nathan. Chang and Halliday's rebuttal to Nathan was a mere contention of individual sources, none of which was substantial, as Nathan handily dismissed these rebuttals as mere red herrings that drew attention away from the real critique of the book - that it attempted to vilify Mao's intentions and personality and thus violates some basic biographical etiquette and ethics - to which Chang and Halliday had no response, except for that lone quote in ''The Observer'', saying that they did ten years of research, as though this justifies their conclusions. I also read in detail ''The Observer'' article that John Smith's provides as the source for Chang and Halliday's "rebuttal". The article in ''The Observer'' makes it clear that the book is only "praised" by book reviews of major North American and British newspapers, none of these reviewers are China specialists, and mentions that China specialists have quite uniformly berated the book for its selective use of sources and questionable (and often wrong) conclusions. Several extremely problematic sections are noted consistently by China scholars. All of this gives me the impression that the presentation of these critiques, in particular the introduction, is not only having serious problems of ], but in general paints an utterly misleading picture of how the book has been received by critics. I also find it troubling that my edits on this article have almost always been reverted ]. ]+<small>(])</small> 22:20, 6 April 2010 (UTC) | |||
:: The intro, for one, is crap. ]+(]) 04:13, 29 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::That's your opinion regarding the rebuttal. The fact is that one was made and it's worth mentioning. I may look into expanding it so that it's a little more interesting to the reader. | |||
:::Your criticism is still tremendously unconstructive. What about the intro is "crap"? You should not wildly make statements like that without providing explanation. --] 06:15, 29 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::The Observer article is wrong as you have referred to it, and if you understood the topic you'd know why. There are a number of academics who have praised the book, not just journalists, some of whom are China "specialists". That they appeared in newspapers is quite irrelevant in suggesting they are somehow not valid. | |||
::::If you have something to say about me, please say it directly rather than skirt around the issue - I have a name, and it's rude of you not to use it. ] (]) 07:45, 8 April 2010 (UTC) | |||
:::: |
:::::I don't doubt that some academics have praised the book. Please give me these sources. ]+<small>(])</small> 18:09, 8 April 2010 (UTC) | ||
::::: |
::::::Are you honestly saying that you can't see a single academic praise the book in this article as it stands? ] (]) 20:15, 8 April 2010 (UTC) | ||
:::::::Not at all. If you read my last message carefully, I said that I never doubted that there ''are'' academic sources that give the book praise (but they are of the minority, and they usually praise the style of the book and doesn't offer substantive reasoning to support the book's conclusions). I am also saying that I want to read these sources in detail to see if there is another side to the story. So far everything I have read from China specialists have criticized the book. I want to read the other side, and since you are involved in this article, perhaps you can give me sources on where to consult this 'other side'. ]+<small>(])</small> 22:02, 8 April 2010 (UTC) | |||
:::::: You guys are so cute. Us laowai just love to be condescended to. --] 07:39, 30 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::::I know what you said. You said ''"please give me these sources"'' . I was asking whether you were saying that you couldn't see a single academic praise the book '''"in this article"''' - i.e. the one we have been editing. Such sources are already there in the praise section. I could understand if you were unsure about commentators with any titles, but if you're looking for academics try starting by looking for people with ''academic titles''. ] (]) 22:50, 8 April 2010 (UTC) | |||
::::::: See? I knew someone was going to play the race card. Anyway, it's not my fault that Westerners seem to love sensationalistic and grossly inaccurate books... and THEN GIVE POSITIVE REVIEWS OF IT!!!!11one11!. | |||
::::::: Laowai is such a crass word. Nobody says that where I come from. --] (]) 10:05, 30 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
{{undent}}With all due respect, the only two people who can remotely be called "China specialists" in the article who actually "praised" the book are Perry Link, and Stuart Schram. Schram actually did not praise the book much at all - merely saying that in some aspects, it increased our understanding of Mao (Nathan also mentions this). Link, on the other hand, is a professor of Chinese literature, not history, politics, or Mao. If these are the only two academic-china-specialist sources that claims to have been 'praising' this book, then my earlier point couldn't be clearer - that China specialists and China historians almost uniformly criticized the book. ]+<small>(])</small> 23:05, 8 April 2010 (UTC) | |||
:::::::: Sorry for using "laowai"--it was inappropriate. I was offended however. The race card was not played until you guys started talking about "Westerners." It's fine if you want to say that Westerners (or some Westerners) are ignorant; it's offensive that you would say so without giving any sort of nod to corresponding ignorances that many Chinese people have. From my experiences in both countries, I think it's fair and accurate to say that the majority of people in both China and America do not know history well at all. --] 10:28, 30 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:You didn't ask for "China specialists", you asked for academics. There's a difference between the two. And in any case you seemed to know what to find, so why play a game and ask me to provide you with a list? | |||
:::::::::Bgaulke is right - Chinese people can be just as "ignorant" and swallow bad history just as easily, whether it's about China or another country. It undermines the positions of you two if you bring race into the matter. ] 10:37, 30 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:Schram does praise the book. Nathan had more criticisms to make nd only expressed a belief that the book ''could'' be valuable. Furthermore, why isn't Baum a "China specialist"? He's written books on Mao and the Cultural Revolution. He's also part of UCLA's Center for Chinese Studies. Also if people like Goodman, Bernstein (focus on politics) is a "China specialist" then I think Michael Yahuda's opinion is at least notable. | |||
:Lastly and most importantly, how does being a "China specialist" make you better able to consider the book than a historian who does not focus on China? If some of the greatest weaknesses of the book are historiographical, any historian should be able to spot them. Indeed, does someone who specialises in politics like Goodman have that historical grounding that would be useful? Not suggesting he doesn't, just wondering. ] (]) 10:45, 10 April 2010 (UTC) | |||
== Who said what? So what! == | |||
:::::::::: Ergh... I think I made it clear that I wasn't saying "Westerners are ignorant" when I changed it to '''"those Westerners who are ignorant"'''. I mean, I apologise if you were offended, but seriously, the book made it to the top of the charts in Britain and elsewhere. Its Chinese version never did in wherever it was available - e.g. Hong Kong. | |||
:::::::::: I'm not saying Chinese people aren't ignorant - of course many of them are. That, however, has no bearing on the point I was making. Plus, a "Westerner" is not a racial concept. It's a cultural one. "Westerners" are made up of many different races (all the races of the world, probably) but are identified by cultural commonalities. | |||
:::::::::: Anyway, I realised what I said was completely off-topic, so I apologise, and let us end the discussion here. --] (]) 23:27, 30 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
OK, user Colipon, PCPP, and friends keep on reminding us, like hey, all these "China Specialists" and China historians are saying this book is crap, rubbish, not worth 5 cents. I would say:"So What!", when the most powerful propaganda machine of the world ] had chosen to keep quiet on this topic. Years had passed by since the book's release at 2005, and CCP had not even issued a single statement condemning the book, or the authors. Mao is still regard as some kind of "God" in China, and "Creator" of PRC, the Hero of the Chinese revolution. Now if we believe in what Colipon's "China Specialists" are telling us, that this book is full of craps, is all fabrication and cheats and lies, then why did the all powerful ] remain in silence, keep quiet, when the beloved revolutionary leader is being littered? Isn't it a bit strange? My question is, do Colipon's "China Specialists" know more about CCP's history than CCP itself?<i><b><small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">]</span></small> ]</b></i> 01:27, 9 April 2010 (UTC) | |||
==Back to the real issue== | |||
:1) Your points are not related to the article at all. 2) They are just your circumstantial speculation. 3) The propaganda department never releases anything about books published by foreign authors. 4) Mao is not a "God" in China; you get jailed if you uphold Maoist policies. ]+<small>(])</small> 13:26, 9 April 2010 (UTC) | |||
:Glad this distraction is over with. Back to the issue, I take it that no one here disagrees with the valididty of including these academic's view of this book, except one person--Smith? If that is indeed the case, then I suggest we contact that admin and ask for unprotection. If Smith is alone he can not hold up the whole article. | |||
== Further revisions to the article == | |||
I have largely reverted the edits made by Mightnightblueowl. Whilst they are clearly good faith, they are problematic for a number of reasons. I will try to explain my reasoning below in sequence. | |||
::You can argue there is consensus, but I won't nor will I go with that you say. ] 10:25, 31 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
# I think it's easier to describe Mao as a Communist than a Marxist as the former is a more general term. Marxist is more specific. In what ways was he a Marxist but not a Communist? | |||
:Btw, I have obained the actual papers written by these university professors as presented in the conference, and can confirm that their characterization by this article/link is accurate. Apparently these papers are being used to form a chapter of a book being currently worked on. Ross's paper is actually a very thoughough review of the book as well, and intersting. I'm hoping to find this online <br />so it can be linked to. Its entitled, ''"Mao, the all-too familiar story."'' Gao's paper asks that I obtain permission before citing the paper--it was sent to me by the organizer of the confrence but Dr. Gao was cc'ed in the email, and my e-mail did state my wanting to quote directly. However, Ross's paper makes no restrictions and we may want to cite some passages, which I'll present here first. | |||
# Is it really POV to describe the Cultural Revolution as chaotic? I would argue that it's POV to deliberately try to remove any references to the violence/chaos that happened. | |||
# I don't think that we can say "with historians arguing that Chang and Halliday misrepresented evidence" in the lead section, as some historians didn't say that. The lead as was currently written was fine. | |||
# The quote from Gao is not prudent. He is not some sort of world-renowed expert who should be singled out for quoting. More importantly their 70 million total, whilst high, is not wildly wrong. Stuart Schram pointed out that most estimates are between 40 and 70 million. So why is Gao so write to criticise the numbers that he must be singled out not just to be quoted but in such a distinctive box? | |||
# Gwynne Dyer is not "another journalist". He is, for example, a historian too. | |||
# The image of "Was Mao really a monster" isn't suitable here. Cover images should only be used on articles concerning the publication in question. | |||
# This article isn't about feedback on the book, it's about the book overall. We don't need even more discussion of why the book was good/bad. | |||
I'm not suggesting anyone responds point-by-point, I was just trying to set out my initial reasoning in a clear way. | |||
:The paper also lists other responses. The Critical section lists the following, some of which I think this article is missing, and we might want to research and include: | |||
I have kept the reference to Gao's comments, but tried to incorporate them with the other criticism. It may be an idea to have a look at the praise/criticism section and see if we can summarise it a bit better. It shouldn't be a collection of everyone who has ever written a comment about the book. ] (]) 15:45, 6 January 2011 (UTC) | |||
*Joseph Esherick, et al. ‘A Critical Assessment of Jung Chang and Jon Halliday’s Mao: The Unknown Story.’ Website <http://orpheus.ucsd.edu/chinesehistory/mao/Mao.htm | |||
:Right, well, as the editor who was responsible for the changes (most of which I still stand by), I will try to explain myself, and then we can go on to discuss and what not... I hope that sounds okay to everyone. Firstly, the choice of "Marxist" over "Communist/communist". Although many western historians tend to use the term "Communist" to refer to all Marxists, describing Mao as a Marxist is a far more accurate description. He was after all trying to implement ] in the PRC, believing that ] was something that could be achieved in the future; in this manner he was a socialist as well as a communist. This belief in the progress from capitalism to socialism to communism is at the core of the political aspects of Marxism. Mao's ideology and worldview, in essence, was that of Marxism, and socialism and communism were merely parts of that. Referring to him as a Communist is not wrong ''per se'', just, I would argue, "less accurate". Secondly, I think "chaotic" is a very subjective term that means different things to different people. Yes the Cultural Revolution was in many parts violent, but violence is not necessarily chaotic, and chaos is not necessarily violent. It is a fiddly word that can imply many things, and as such is not, in my opinion, fit for an encyclopaedia. I also believe that in highlighting that Jung Chang lived through the "chaos" of the Cultural Revolution, we are implying a slight POV opinion attitude that is detrimental to the Revolution. Perhaps I am only splitting hairs here. To answer your third point, I think it needs to be made clear in the lead that the majority of academics focusing on the study of China have denounced ''The Unknown Story'' as rubbish; a few, particularly those who are not specialists in China, have not. This needs, I think, to be clarified. Skipping the fourth, fifth and sixth points (where I think you make a fair argument and I would have to concur), we then come to the seventh point. This is where I really have some difficulties in why you deleted my information. | |||
*Hamish Macdonald ‘A swan’s little book of ire’ Sydney Morning Herald, October 8th, 2005. | |||
*Andrew Nathan ‘Jade and Plastic’ London Review of Books Vol. 27, No. 2 17th November, 2005. | |||
*‘Mao: The Unknown Story – An Assessment The China Journal No.55 Jan 2006 | |||
:*Gregor Benton and Steve Tsang ‘The Portrayal of Opportunism, Betrayal and Manipulation in Mao’s Rise to Power.’ | |||
:*Timothy Cheek ‘The Number One Counter-Revolutionary Inside the Party: Academic Biography as Mass Criticism.’ p. 109. | |||
:*Lowell Dittmer ‘The Pitfalls of Charisma’ p.119. | |||
:*Geremie R. Barmé ‘I’m so Ronree.’ p.128 | |||
] 08:09, 31 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
::Andrew Nathan is already mentioned - Hamish MacDonald is a writer without any academic references as far as I can see, though his article is also listed. ] 10:30, 31 March 2007 (UTC) | |||
:The majority of readers coming here won't be familiar with this particular area of Chinese history, and upon reading the Praise and Criticism sections will come to the conclusion that "oh, some historians think it'’s good, some think it is bad". The fact is, at least two academic anthologies have been published that go into some depth dealing with the core problems with ''The Unknown Story'' (''Was Mao Really a Monster?'' and the Jan 06 issue of ''The China Joural'') and Mobo Gao has devoted a whole chapter to its issues in his book ''The Battle for China's Past'', and they have laid out solid critical flaws in most aspects of the work. I really don't think it's any good simply giving a list of quotes from critics if we do not present those very critics' arguments as to why ''The Unknown Story'' is such a flawed piece of history. Readers should understand '''''why''''' historians have criticised it, not just the fact that they have.(] (]) 17:02, 6 January 2011 (UTC)) | |||
Hamish McDonald is a journalist {{unsigned|Bgaulke}} | |||
''The Battle for China's Past'' by Mobo Gao, http://www.confucius.adelaide.edu.au/people/mobogao.html | |||
On Confucius Institute Adelaide U website, Mobo Gao is the director of Confucius Institute Adelaide. | |||
{{quote|During an inspection of the Hanban late last month, ], one of the nine members of the Standing Committee of the Politburo in charge of ideology and propaganda, stressed that the construction of Confucius Institutes "is an important channel to glorify Chinese culture, to help Chinese culture spread to the world", which is "part of China's foreign propaganda strategy".http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/IE24Ad02.html }} | |||
::Well even Mao's article describes him as a communist. Given communist is more widely understood than Marxist I think it would be appropriate to use the current term. | |||
==New edits== | |||
::If you don't like "chaos" we could use a different word like "violence" or summarise it a bit more like "violent destruction of traditional Chinese society". Feel free to make some suggestions here. I don't understand your point about being "detrimental to the Revolution". | |||
::I have made this point before, but you were not here to see it. What is a "specialist" and how does one gain recognition as such? Is there an international committee that hands out certificates? Moreover, why does being a "specialist" in something to do with China mean your opinion automatically counts more than someone who works in other fields? For example, a university lecturer could be a "China specialist" by studying Ancient Chinese history or modern Chinese politics - what does that have to do with Mao Zedong? I think that you may have fallen into the trap that I've seen other people do, which is to associate work with China to mean someone's opinion is more valid than someone who doesn't focus on China. | |||
::Sure, if the only people who had good things to say about this book were hacks and lecturers in agriculture (for sake of argument), you might have a point. But we're talking about people who have written historical works themselves. This means that they (should) understand History and should be able to criticise a book that fails to conform to minimum standards. After all very little of the criticism is "Chang and Halliday say X, but actually historical document A proves Y happened". It's more about universal standards that apply to any historical work. Then there are those who have worked in fields concerning China - such as Richard Baum, Stuart Schram and Perry Link. We can't make a universal declaration because it's not clear-cut. The current statement that ''Academic reviews from China specialists were, on the whole, far more critical'' goes as far as I think it can. Otherwise we have to start making an assessment as to how the feedback should be assessed, which we can't as it's original research and far too subjective. | |||
::We don't use the terms "some ..... and others". If people want to think that, they can. But as I said above we can't make readers' minds up for them. They can read the reviews and decide for themselves. The fact that there has been some serious work in trying to pull apart the book does not mean that it is bad, because it's always easier to criticise than praise. When was the last time you ever saw an academic write part of a book in support of a historical work like this? | |||
::This article is about the book, not feedback on it. It is already heavily weighted in favour of discussing the reaction to it, and any further discussion would unbalance the article even more. ] (]) 18:48, 6 January 2011 (UTC) | |||
:::Thank you for replying John Smith’s. Regarding the terms “chaos” and what not, why do we not simply put that she lived in China up until whatever date it was, and therefore lived through the Cultural Revolution ? There is no real need to use terms like “chaos” or “violence” at all in this particular instance, other than to colour the language a little bit, which is simply unnecessary. Your point about specialists is taken, and I don’t see any purpose to debating this particular issue further. I would still argue however that the section on criticism should be structured so as to actually explain what the specific criticisms are i.e. poor use of sourcing etc. One must remember that this is probably one of the two most controversial books of history written in the twenty-first century (the only other that I can think of that has seen such controversy has been ]'s '']''), and as such criticism of it plays a big part in the reason why it is notable (as far as I am aware, no other biographies of Mao have their own Misplaced Pages pages, nor do they probably warrant them). I am biased in my opinions of my book, because I believe it to be intrinsically bad history (but good propaganda), and I would never deny this, but I am still committed to the production of a Non-POV article. As such I am also committed to fleshing out the synopsis section as well.(] (]) 19:47, 6 January 2011 (UTC)) | |||
::::At the very least it needs to be clear that she lived through the Cultural Revolution. That it's implied wouldn't be enough. Maybe "turmoil" would work. A little bit of colour never hurt. I don't know why you added a date to Wild Swans, it's linked. | |||
::User Midnightblueowl:"as far as I am aware, no other biographies of Mao have their own Misplaced Pages pages, nor do they probably warrant them)" This statement is wrong: What about ], and ]?<i><b><small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">]</span></small> ]</b></i> 01:39, 7 January 2011 (UTC) | |||
::::I'm rather surprised by your comment on controversial books and that this ranks at the top. We could discuss any number of autobiographies by politicians like Tony Blair, George Bush Junior, Sarah Palin, etc. But even moving away from those sorts of books, haven't you read any of the feedback on ]' works? Now there is someone who really has not received any support from credible individuals. In contrast this book has been praised by people with standing to comment. And in terms of notoriety, it's not the criticism but the author who gave the book a profile. Jung Chang is one of the best known of all writers on China in Europe and North America. Her critics, and I mean this without malice, are nobodies. If they had not said a word about the book it would have had just as great a profile as it currently does/did immediately after release. | |||
Seeing that the page was no longer protected, I added the Gao and Ross section. There is a strong consensus for its inclusion. I see no salient reason to disagree. | |||
::::Everyone's biased in their own way, but I hope you're not going to let that affect what you write here. ] (]) 23:33, 6 January 2011 (UTC) | |||
<br />There is something lopsided about the criticisms of the book that this page presents, since most of them are negative. I believe that this lopsidedness is for two reasons: 1. most of the criticisms out there are negative, 2. most of the people editing this page are more interested in negative criticisms because they dislike the book. | |||
:::::The critics aren't "nobodies", they're professors who study China for a living. True, journalists have more attention nowadays, but that doesn't mean we should single out professors. It's the fact that the book had a great profile that it received critics. I'm sure there's plenty of books out there with tons of erroneous information. But no one knows about them so professors were never pissed off by it. And believe me, this book has plenty for academics to be angry about. ] (]) 14:47, 7 January 2011 (UTC) | |||
<br />People upset about the number of negative criticisms would do better to add positive criticisms that they discover, as opposed to simply removing negative criticisms that the editing community thinks should be included. | |||
::::::I don't think you understand the point I was trying to make. They are nobodies in as far that hardly anyone has heard of them. That doesn't mean their views are worthless. My point was that their criticism in no way made the book higher profile than it was before they gave their feedback. ] (]) 21:03, 7 January 2011 (UTC) | |||
<br />I also made minor edits to the introduction, including a bit on the controversy surrounding the book. | |||
:::::::I thought we were talking about whether this book was "controversial", which it was in the context of the academic world, though maybe not for the average lay reader. Professors can be very famous in the academic world, and if we put in the commentaries of the media world, then I don't see why we shouldn't involve the academic one. ] (]) 15:23, 7 January 2011 (UTC) | |||
<br />On a more general level, I would like to lament the partisanship of the editors recently involved in this project. To grossly overgeneralize, it is clear that the "anti-Maoists" are me and John Smith and the "pro-Maoists" are Sumple and Giovanni, as well as Colipon and Hong Qigong. It is, of course, to be expected that people would have ideological affiliations, but it is distressing that none of us, more or less, seem to have done a good job being fair to the other side, both in our edits and on the talk page. I don't say this to point fingers or to start an argument, but to say that I think we can, should, and owe it to each other to do better in the future. People with biases against Chang's book should not instinctively fight against all edits made by people biased towards the book, and vice versa. Every editor should cast a critical, fair, and generous eye on all edits of all varieties. I'm sorry if I'm sounding pedantic, naive, negative, or unnecessarily blunt, but these are my thoughts at this point. Make no mistake: I have enjoyed working with all of you and I look forward to continuing to do so. I do think that we have accomplished things that we should be proud of, and that the page is gradually becoming a better and better resource. --] 05:06, 4 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
: |
::::::::No, the discussion (from what I could see) was about notoriety and why it had a high profile. There are already academic reviews (good and bad). ] (]) 10:12, 9 January 2011 (UTC) | ||
:::::::::If you read my first statement, you would realize I was saying that the reason that the book had so many negative academic reviews was BECAUSE of its high profile. It was in response to your critique about how the academic reviews did not promote the popularity of the book. My point was that just b/c it didn't promote the book's popularity does not equate with leaving out the critiques, especially when the vast majority of academics that actually specialize in the area(Chinese history, Chinese politics) are negative, contrasting with media reviews(funnily enough, that's actually one of the critiques about the book. She draws from many sources who would probably have no clue about the subject matter). I don't see any wiki requirement in which we could only put out critiques that somehow promoted the books' popularity. Most critiques are there b/c so-and-so book was popular in the first place. There are precious few critiques that contributed to a book's popularity before said book became popular. Do you really expect notable professors to give criticisms about books before said book achieved popularity? By definition of having a "high profile", I doubt the academic world would even know about such a book. On the other hand, did most of the positive reviews help give it a high profile? Probably not, as well. If you know the author you'd probably realize the book achieved popularity from her previous book(Wild Swans, very well written, btw). So lets be fair about this. But let's say that you are right: that a book is not "controversial" if all criticisms of said book did not help give it a high profile. This still doesn't mean that the critiques of this particular book should be discarded. I suggest you look up "Was Mao Really a Monster", which certainly helped the book's popularity. It's a book containing about a dozen academic reviews targeting Mao: The Unknown Story. Basically, Chang received an entire book filled with academic reviews dedicated to criticizing her non-fiction as fiction. I'd say that's pretty important. ] (]) 13:08, 8 January 2011 (UTC). | |||
::::::::::I'm in agreement with Gnip here, and I think it vitally important that this article explains '''why''' the book was criticised rather than (as it currently stands), just throwing in a selection of critical quotes.(] (]) 21:04, 14 January 2011 (UTC)) | |||
:::::::::::Well, I wouldn't go that far. I was arguing that the page should be kept as it is, with opinions that both praise and criticize the book. The quotes from the criticism section explains the "why" well enough. Adding more would just be reiterating what has been already said. ] (]) 16:40, 19 January 2011 (UTC). | |||
:::::::::Wouldn't it be ] if wiki editors begin to explain "Why" this "Why" that?<i><b><small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">]</span></small> ]</b></i> 23:47, 19 January 2011 (UTC) | |||
:: Oi, I'm not a pro-Maoist! I want an apology. I'm anti-Chang, but that does not mean I'm pro-Mao. In fact, I'm just as anti-Mao as the next man, the next man not being Jung Chang. | |||
:::::::::: Not really. Original research is putting things in wikipedia that wasn't actually published. However, if you read the criticism section it shows that the "why" was actually published. Critics don't just say "it's bad" and move on. If so then they don't deserve a place in wikipedia. However, this is also why I am arguing to leave the criticism section as is. The quotes explain the "why" well enough. There's no need to add to them unless you are just itching to summarize.] (]) 18:00, 20 January 2011 (UTC). | |||
:: Plus, my anti-Chang sentiments are not some superficial ideological attachment ( = Communist brainwashing) or nationalistic fanaticism. I just don't like people who make a buck out of <s>generalising</s>simplifying an entire people's complex experiences, no matter what race or creed they are. --] (]) 12:40, 4 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::Gnip is on the right track here, though I would like to suggest a few corrections to his last statement. The reason the book received so much negative feedback from academics was not only because of its high profile, but it certainly did play a major role. Historians did definitely want to counter the widespread praise the book was receiving from journalists and other non-specialists, but it was also the book’s clear and obvious failings that drew a lot of attention from academics, who felt it was their responsibility to expose the book’s problematic research and unsubstantiated conclusions. Any work claiming to provide a comprehensive biography of one of the world's most famous (or infamous) leaders will get noticed, and will certainly be watched closely by academics specializing in China studies. As someone currently working within this very millieu, I can say that most specialists I know of have spoken to were at least aware of the book. Gnip is, however, correct that the published response to the book (such as the Benton volume, or the China Journal response) were unusual, as I have stated before in this article's discussion. I think this is the part that is getting lost on John Smith's, unfortunately. Though I may be splitting hairs rehashing Gnip's words, what I am trying to clarify is that people should not be under the impression that academics only noticed the book due it its huge publicity. It is not correct to say that without its ‘high profile’ “the academic world would about such a book.” Professional historians deal daily with the “low profile”, often reviewing books that never become very popular or well-known (ie. they don't sell very well outside of academia). In fact, they frequently research and dissect works that few outside of a very small circle of individuals will ever read. In this sense, academics are very insulated in what they do, and are often disconnected from the general public. That is not to say, however, that they are unaware of new publications outside of academia, particularly those re-evaluating major figures in history. Also, Benton’s volume “Was Mao Really a Monster” was not, in my opinion, a major contributor to the book’s popularity, as Gnip suggests. As you know, MTUS was first published in 2005, and this collection of reviews was only published in 2009, quite some time after the book had already become popular (and as you know, the reviews found in the volume had been previously published elsewhere). What is important about this recent volume is not how it contributed to the book’s popularity, in my opinion, but rather as a reflection of how distressed the academic community truly is by the MTUS’s continued popularity. This last fact is what I am concerned does not quite get across in the article, as it stands. Unfortunately, I’m not sure how to appropriately correct that issue. I think that is what Midnightblueowl has been trying to address, and what I myself tried to do some time ago. ] (]) 00:34, 25 January 2011 (UTC) | |||
:::Sorry Sumple, I didn't mean to ruffle any feathers. I realized, as I said, that I was "grossly overgeneralizing" when I wrote "pro-Mao" and "anti-Mao." I understand what you mean: there's a middle ground between supporting a poor piece of anti-Mao scholarship and thinking that the ] is the greatest thing since sliced ]. --] 18:45, 4 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::I don't know, Milamber. I've known a number of less popular books without much critical review. Take the "Scarlet Memorial", for example. I have not found many academic critiques about the book, but I did find some positive reviews about how the book reveals that Chinese communists support cannibalism. Such a controversial book must have at least SOME negative reviews from the academia if it were more popular enough. Of course, perhaps you know many less popular works that were critically reviewed by the academia. I admit I'm not as well read as I let off :). ] (]) 12:14, 28 January 2011 (UTC) | |||
Guys, let's not have another argument, please. Sumple, Bgaulke was only trying to show what he saw as the partisan attitude on the article, even if it was very crude. He wasn't making a personal dig at you. ] 13:48, 4 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:As an addition to what I have previously said, I would note that the main areas that critics highlight are: 1) Chang and Halliday's erroneous usage of sources, ranging from the schewed interviews that they performed to the misquoting of formerly published information, 2) the extremely biased polemical nature of their work, 3) the (possibly intentional) misleading use of their referencing system and other bizarre formatting ideas (such as merging the ] and ] forms of English translations), 4) the outright falsification of events, and 5) the self-contradictory statements and logical inconsistency. I believe that, using the wealth of criticism of the work by a wide range of experts in the field of Chinese history, we can present concise paragraphs explaining each and every one of these criticisms in this article. It is my firm belief that this will improve the article dramatically, making it far more readable and understandable to the average reader. Of course, this must go hand in hand with the greater referencing and fleshing out of the rest of the work, namely the synopsis section, which could really do with more quotes from ''The Unknown Story'' itself.(] (]) 18:30, 6 January 2011 (UTC)) | |||
==No more "get out of jail free" cards== | |||
:It would be much better to edit the article first in ways that we can easily agree upon, such as expanding the synopsis section as you suggest. We can worry about the more disputed areas later. ] (]) 00:42, 6 February 2011 (UTC) | |||
Ok, Giovanni, I am tired with your silly reversions. You have demonstrated no real willingness to compromise, just push your own POV. I compromised, yet you continue to insist on having your way. If you continue with this course of action I will have to assume bad faith on your part and ignore any further attempts by you to discuss matters and reach agreement. ] 19:29, 4 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:There is on compromise needed for many things: NPOV, V, etc. These are policies which should never be compromised. You have no choice but to abide by the overwhelming consensus. I suggest that if you can't convince any of the other editors here that you are right, that you stop your reverting, which is what is indeed silly, since it doesn't get you anywhere. Also, it appears you are violating the 3RR rule again, this time by using an IP address. Do you deny that is your IP address?] 19:43, 4 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::Of course I deny it - as I said on your talk page it's from Hungary (use an IP tracker from a google search). Obviously that guy disagrees with you and Hong. ] 19:45, 4 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::So, how is Budapest? I'm not as stupid as you seem to think.] 20:01, 4 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
I'm fully aware of how to use a WHOIS to check the origin of an IP address, but for everybody's sake, including that of John Smith's, I've filed a check user report. Note - I didn't file it as an accusation, and I'm fully aware that the IP came from Hungary. I filed it to make it official to everyone whether or not John Smith's and the IP editor are the same person. ] <small>(] - ])</small> 20:03, 4 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:For some reason I doubt it will satisfy Giovanni....... ] 20:12, 4 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::Your "for some reason" is just common sense. So, your doubt is correct. In my opinion, the evidence is very strong in this case--even if it is not absolute proof--and even if you are not the same person. Getting someone else who is not an established user to edit war for you, counts. It's too much of a coincidence, otherwise.] 20:20, 4 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::Sorry, wikipedia isn't a witch-hunt - unless you have evidence, you have nothing. ] 20:45, 4 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::Hmm, looks like Deskana would agree with me on that one. ] 23:47, 4 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::I don't know how you've inferred anything from my protection of the page. All I've said is that there's edit warring, I'm not siding with either of you. I've not even read the article... --] ] 23:48, 4 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
===Chinese New Left=== | |||
The edit war really seems ridiculous to me. John, you keep saying that no one compromises besides you, but that's clearly not true. Sumple let stand your introductory paragraph revisions, Giovanni allowed my inclusion of Sun Shuyun in the Luding Bridge section, the claim wording has been dropped from the hundreds of interviews sentence, etc. Plenty of compromises have been made by everyone who is working on this page. It's time to move on. Good work was accomplished today until the page was protected. It's frustrating that we have to halt our efforts again. --] 02:57, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
Midnightblueowl, are you pushing ] POV here in wikipedia? Looking at talkpages of ], ], and here, there seems to have some sort of pattern. http://www.wyzxsx.com/ 乌有之乡 would be a good place for your contributions.<i><b><small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">]</span></small> ]</b></i> 07:38, 6 February 2011 (UTC) | |||
:Bgaulke my comments were directed towards Giovanni, not anyone else - Sumple can be very good at accepting other users' proposals. If Gio wants to compromise he should be willing to discuss the matter with me, rather than try to get the block lifted without consultation on the talk page and use nonsense justification as to why no changes should be made like the NPOV and vandalism rules. ] 09:22, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
Not everyone shares your monomaniacal and ideologically-driven determination to falsify Chinese history; no surprise that disagreeing with you becomes occasion for a political witch-hunt. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 15:13, 13 September 2011 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:Unsigned IP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> | |||
== Scarlet Memorial == | |||
== Page protected AGAIN due to edit warring == | |||
] is also a very interesting book, would user Midnightblueowl, Gnip, Milamber, John Smith's and others care to help to build up the content a bit?<i><b><small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">]</span></small> ]</b></i> 05:02, 30 January 2011 (UTC) | |||
Once more, this page is now protected due to edit warring. Please discuss the issue then ] once you've reached a decision on what to do. --] ] 23:44, 4 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:What other academic books reference it, and are there any significant academic reviews of it, like there are for ''The Unknown Story'' or ''The Private Life of Chairman Mao'' ? I have never heard of any, but then that does of course not mean that they do not exist. If it fails in these then, interesting or not, it may well warrant deletion I'm afraid. (] (]) 23:29, 4 February 2011 (UTC)) | |||
:Unprotected now... --] ] 15:48, 9 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
This is a good one:http://taiwanreview.nat.gov.tw/fp.asp?xItem=1441&CtNode=128 | |||
== Header == | |||
Alice W. Cheang, is an assistant professor of classical and modern Chinese in the Department of East Asian Languages and Literatures at the University of Notre Dame. <i><b><small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">]</span></small> ]</b></i> 10:53, 5 February 2011 (UTC) | |||
Omg another protection? Well, in any case I have no problems with John Smith's latest version of the second paragraph. But I don't agree that either sentence needs citations, because detailed references are supplied further in the article. Perhaps just a reference or a link to the relevant section? --] (]) 00:10, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:That'd do me. Having uncited stuff in the leading paragraph isn't good, even if there are citations further on in the article. Linking them up would be nice. --] ] 00:12, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::I had a different idea that we could mentioned one person for each piece - but a quick reference would also be good. ] 00:15, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
== Mobo Gao references to be removed == | |||
==All change== | |||
Michael Rank: | |||
Right, we now seem to have a dispute over the wording of a single paragraph. I'm going to put both up to compare. | |||
{{quote|"But Gao's attacks on Chang are sometimes uncomfortably personal, while his defence of the cultural revolution failed to convince me." }} | |||
Gregor Benton: | |||
{{quote|""A powerful mixture of political passion and original research, a brave polemic against the fashionable view on China. ... Aims a knockout blow at Jung Chang's recent book on Mao, which Bush and the conservatives rave-reviewed." Gregor Benton, Professor of Chinese History, University of Cardiff.}} | |||
The above two reviewers would about sum up the Western mainstream academic view point on Gao. I have spend hours doing Google search on Gao's book, hoping to discover some "positive" reviews, unfortunately, I failed. Looks like The Battle for China's Past: Mao & the Cultural Revolution has been more or less ignored by the general academic world. | |||
That said, first of all, Gao's references should be removed from this article, according to ], and editors are welcomed to join this discussion to reach consensus.<i><b><small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">]</span></small> ]</b></i> 08:16, 24 February 2011 (UTC) | |||
''At a 2006 conference on the Cultural Revolution, Professor Kaz Ross of the University of Tasmania commented that "the Chang-Halliday book was only the latest in the genre of 'faction' — fiction with a cloak of facts."'' | |||
''In the session titled the "Struggles Over Representation of History," concerning the distortions of history and representation of Mao, the Chang and Halliday book was discussed by Professor of Chinese Studies, Gao Mobo, and Professor of Asian Studies, Kaz Ross, who advanced the opinion that "the Chang-Halliday book was only the latest in the genre of 'faction' — fiction with a cloak of facts."'' | |||
I'm sorry to disagree with Arilang, who has done so much good work on this as on so many articles, but I would not favor removing Gao's references. My understanding is that NPOV doesn't apply to the authors being cited, only to us as editors. Otherwise we would also have to remove the favorable citations as well. A summary of the response needs to include the full range, whether or not we agree. Mobo Gao is a well established scholar. The fact that the book has been reviewed in prominent places shows that it was taken seriously. He is included in Gregor Benton's anthology ''Was Mao Really a Monster?''. So giving him one sentence doesn't strike me as "undue weight." ] (]) | |||
The first one is accurate, clear and concise. The second has no context as to what the "session" was (i.e. what the session is), where it was taking place, which university the people mentioned come from, and it implies that the Gao said the quote too. As the article has no mention of what Gao says he should not be included - it was Ross' quote so she should be the one mentioned. Even if Gao does agree with it, until he can be quoted through another article he shouldn't be mentioned. | |||
Arilang, I think you need to refine the definition of a "positive review". Your quote by Michael Rank does not tell her entire opinion, but consists only of a half-truth. It's called selective quoting. Her review isn't positive, but it's not negative either. What you quoted from Gregor Benton is entirely positive. If Gregor thought negatively of Mobo Gao, he wouldn't have put him in his book. I also find it hard to believe that you spent "hours" trying to find a positive review and failing whereas I can find one in around 30 seconds. Besides, having one sentence by Mobo Gao in the critique section is hardly "undue weight". Furthermore, this sentence is not a "minority view" in the academia, so I'm afraid wiki rules doesn't apply to the point here. It's just one sentence, I say leave it as it is. ] (]) 2:58 25 Febrary 2011(UTC) | |||
As a note, please do not use citations to say who someone is - that is not what they are for. Identifying them through their university is sufficient if they do not have their own wikipedia entry. ] 10:00, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
Of these two paragraphs, the first is to be preferred, for being the more concise. I echo the points noted above by ], and would add that the latter is liable to lead to confusion. It also adds very little by way of meaning despite being nearly twice as long. ] 15:21, 5 April 2007 (UTC)Xmas1973 16:22, 5 April 2007 (BST) | |||
:I prefer the second one as that gives more information, more context, while the first one is too much like a fragment. Moreover, it leaves out the important information about the section that this report was about: "distortions of history and representation of Mao." That is the session. And, it is this context, talking about distortions of history that these academics were speaking about when they brought up this book. Simply saying a "conference on the Cultural Revolution" is vauge and general, and it does not identify the session. Its not true that one does not know what this is from because it links to the full title and date of this conference. Also, I disagree that mentioning what school the professor is from is more important than mentionining what title/academic possition they hold within institution of higher learning. If they had their own article, then we could link to that information, but since they don't we should state their qualifications. I support adding a link to each professor's own schools website which provides information as to their credencials. Lastly, the passage does not imply that Gao said what is clearly attributed to Prof. Katz--at most it implies that Gao agrees with her, and this is accurate--he does and says something quite similar: "it is a fiction dressed up as history."] 17:18, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::But the article doesn't mention anything Gao said. So unless you want to substitute another source for the citation (or add another) then whatever you claim he said is irrelevant. ] 17:39, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::No, but the article does say it "was discussed by Gao Mobo and Kaz Ross, two professors from Australia." And then it goes on to paraphrase Prof. Kaz. We are only reporting that in the exact same kind of context. It would be misleading only if Dr. Gao actually disagreed and said something completely different--but he doesn't. I read both papers and they are in agreement. We don't need another source for Gao because we are not actually quoting him above, but we are reporting that he discussed the book along with Prof. Katz, as the article reports. This is fair, and its helpful for the reader who wants to research more, esp. since Prof. Gao is currently working on a book that will contain two chapters debunking this book.] 17:46, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::Then provide links to the papers - don't use the article to imply something it doesn't say. I must also object again on the point that Gao seems to be a language teacher, not a China politics academic or historian. | |||
::::Also I still agree with Xmas. The second one gives unnecessary information without even mentioning the basics, such at the fact this was taking place at a conference last year. "In the session titled the "Struggles Over Representation of History," concerning the distortions of history and representation of Mao" means nothing to anyone who doesn't know it happened at that conference. Maybe we can come up with a new version, but please do not insist on having yours as it is - it is far too confusing. ] 17:54, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::The links are provided and the article does not imply anything it doesn't say. It says exactly what the article says, and as far as any implication that one could possibly gather from his menton, its accurate---Dr. Gao's possition is nearly identical to Prof. Katz. Its important to mention that he also discussed the paper in this conext of "distortions of history."The other objection you raise about the reader not knowing what this session is about, this is easily fixed by adding that info in--not by taking out the name of this session, which is just as important. Lastly, your concern that Pro. Gao is only a language teacher, this has been refuted many times and doesn't merit any serious response anymore.] 18:05, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::No, you have not clearly said why a Chinese teacher is qualified to talk about this. Do so here without writing several lines of irrelevant stuff. | |||
::::::The article does imply Gao said what it mentions Ross did. It also goes into unnecessary detail - if people want to read up on the details of the conference they can just read the article. ] 18:17, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::No, the article says Gao and Katz discussion this book in the context of distortions of history. It only implies that Gao has a similar view as that quoted by Katz--if it implies anything at all. And this is accurate. Hence, its legitimate to include. Again, about Prof. Gaos qualifications, they have already been provided numerous times, along with his books-- and you choose to continue to ignore all the facts about this. Even one of his texts is required reading in many university History courses on China! I do not take your objection to his qualifications to speak on this matter at all serious, since you pretend still not to see what every other editor on here has acknowleged] 18:20, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::::"It only implies that Gao has a similar view as that quoted by Katz--if it implies anything at all. And this is accurate." | |||
::::::::You must '''cite a source to show that is accurate''' - it is not enough to say you found it out for yourself. | |||
::::::::You are also ignoring the points I made about brevity - why does the article have to have all this stuff about what they were talking about. All that is relevant is the opinions made. It is enough to say it happened at the conference last year. ] 18:24, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::No, I don't need to cite a source because we are not quoting Gao. However, anyone can investigate and obtain the their papers, as I have. Or, they can contact Prof. Gao, as I have. We do not need to cite sources for your reading into the possible interpretations of what you think it implies by mentioning the accurate and important context of what the articles reports. If you think it implies something that is NOT accurate, then by all means show that. Then, you'd have a valid objection. Brevity is fine, but not at the expense of curtailing important information such as the topic and context of the session that the papers and talks were given.] 18:28, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::The onus is '''not'' on an editor or reader to contact Professor Gao - the onus is on the person making the edit to provide relevant, verifiable information. As I keep saying and Xmas said, the version you propose implies Gao backed his colleague without information that is the case. If you refuse to change the wording then either it is not suitable or needs another source. | |||
::::::::::You are still ignoring points about brevity - why are you making such a song-and-dance about this conference that you want to name every little detail given in the article? It is far too superfluous. ] 18:34, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::We are quoting the article. The article says it was discussed by Gao and Katz. That is important to include. It goes on to paraphrase Katz. We report that. We report the actual topic the session was on. That is important. I am not doing anything more than that. Your seeing 'implications" being made--when even if they are being made are accurate--is not a valid reason to not report on the the article reports, concerning these two quaified academics. About brevity, it shouldn't be too breif, or too long. It should be long enough to provide pertinent info, which my version does.] 19:29, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::Your version doesn't even say it was being held at a conference - it has some blurb about the individual seminar they were attending. The reference is not to promote their attendance, just mention what was said. ] 19:33, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::::I already responded to this: Then add in the conference info (even though it is in the link). That is an easy fix. Their attentence, and the nature of the attendence are all important facts for context that are part and parcel of what was said. <small>—The preceding ] comment was added by ] (] • ]) 19:41, 5 April 2007 (UTC).</small><!-- HagermanBot Auto-Unsigned --> | |||
:::::::::You could say the same thing about the sections on Perry Link and Richard Baum, for example. Why are there sentences full of their quotes? Why not keep them "brief"? Plus, John Smith's edit specifically leaves out Gao, when it has been established that he's a credible source. I see a double-standard here. ] <small>(] - ])</small> 18:35, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::Hong, the quotations are full because they are expressing '''opinions''' - the sections do not go on about the circumstances in which they wrote, published, etc their reviews. Gao could be mentioned but not with Giovanni's version as I keep saying it implies he said/supported something not mentioned in the article - if he is to be quoted we need a source. ] 18:41, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::That's not really the point you were making about brevity. Theoretically, we can just state whether or not Link and Baum thought the book was "good" or "bad". Why have all that extra information? ] <small>(] - ])</small> 18:51, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::That was actually the point I was making. Giovanni (and maybe you) was insisting on using material that was not required to understand what was actually said about the book. That does not apply to the other views, as the lengthy bits are their actual views. If anything this extract gets more information than the others - if it followed the same format as the others it would only say ''Professor Kaz Ross of the University of Tasmania commented that "the Chang-Halliday book was only the latest in the genre of 'faction' — fiction with a cloak of facts."'' ] 18:57, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
Giovanni33, I'd be interested to see some claims to back up Assoc. Prof. Gao's qualifications. You dismissed the reasonable request by John Smith's with a fair degree of nonchalance, but by Gao's own admission on his UTas website his primary function is as a teacher. His research interests include Chinese politics, but this could amount to little more than some light reading in the BBC History magazine! (Before you eat me though, I'm not saying it does, but remains an overt theoretical possibility.) He has given talks on the subject, but equally I have given talks about Nirvana; I don't hold myself out as an expert though. | |||
And to refer to your comment: "Even one of his texts is required reading in many university History courses on China!", I can think of a dozen subjects where prescribed reading is little followed, less believed and added to the list purely as "filler". | |||
Finally, with reference to the top two paragraphs in this section, the second makes unhelpful implications. It is muddled and unclear. Perhaps a third way should be sought by which each point is elaborated, avoiding verbosity, but so that both sides are satisfied. ] 19:56, 5 April 2007 (UTC)Xmas1973 | |||
:I dismissed the request by Smith because it was not reasonable. The reason it’s not reasonable is because it has already been addressed numerous times, and thus serves only as a distraction, a diversion. If you bother to go up and read you will see all the supporting evidence that back ups the claims that Prof. Gao is more than qualified to speak on this subject. | |||
:You say that his research interests ''"could amount to little more than light reading in BBC history Magazine,''' and that the required reading that many colleges assign for his book on Chinese history and politics in their highly regarded history classes on China, could be "''little followed, less believed, and added purely as "filler."'' Well, these speculations about possibilities are not logical to the point it makes here. There is a lot of "maybe's" but what we do know is that his texts ARE assigned reading at reputable colleges History courses on China. And that is the point. It’s not refuted by pointing out that maybe they are only "fluff." So what? You might say that its 'filler" but why choose his works as 'filler,"--esp. if his research into China's history and politics might only at the level of "light reading in BBC history magazine.' Illogical. But, I happen to know that his assigned textbook in the History course taught at Reed College's Hist 320, for examples is not "little followed, less believed, or added purely as "filler." I know this because I've been in this class, not that there should be any reason to speculate along these lines in the first place, esp. not at highly regarded college like Reed's: . The textbook, btw is: Gao, Mobo, Gao Village: A Portrait of Rural Life in Modern China, Stanford Univ Press; (February 1991) ISBN: 0804718881 | |||
:As far as his research in China's politics could be "light reading in BBC history magazine," that is also a "could be" that is also not true. | |||
:Some of his scholarly publications by Prof. Gao that are in these peer reviewed journals, concerning the CR: | |||
::*Gao, Mobo C. F. "Maoist Discourse and a Critique of the Present Assessments of the Cultural Revolution." Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars 26.3 (1994); | |||
::*"Memoirs and Interpretation of the Cultural Revolution." Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars 27.1 (1995); | |||
::*"Debating the Cultural Revolution: Do We Only Know What We Believe?" Critical Asian Studies, Vol. 34, No. 3 (September 2002). | |||
:Other notable facts are that he is regularly featured in scholarly conferences on this topic. For example: ''"Roundtable: China Studies 40 Years After the Cultural Revolution Discussants: '''Mobo Gao, University of Tasmania,''' Australia; Emily Honig, University of California at Santa Cruz; Dongping Han, Warren Wilson College; Zheng Wang, University of Michigan; Michael Dutton, University of Melbourne, Australia; Gary Sigley, University of Western Australia, Australia 2006 marks the 40th anniversary of an event that has profoundly affected both the P.R.C. and China Studies’ understanding of the Mao and post-Mao era: the Cultural Revolution. This international roundtable '''brings together distinguished scholars of both the era and of the field of China Studies itself''', to reflect on current CR scholarship and its consequences for our knowledge of China and for China Studies.''See: http://www.aasianst.org/absts/2006abst/China/C-108.htm. He is also currently working on a book on the topic of Mao the man, the Cultural Revolution, the Mao era and the post-Mao reform. In that book he has two chapters detailing criticism of this book. | |||
:Finally, if you read his bio on the university site, you saw that it reports "Gao is a frequent speaker on topics of...contemporary '''Chinese politics''' and culture at universities such as Oxford, Harvard, Washington Seattle, Hong Kong and mainland China. He has appeared on ABC radio and BBC television and radio commenting on '''China and Chinese affairs'''." No doubt Oxford, Harvard, etc. invite him to speak on these topics as "filler" because of his light reading in BBC history Magazine.] 21:18, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:Giovanni, as I believe I asked before, how is a book on modern China (the textbook you mentioned) relevant to a discussion on Mao Zedong? | |||
::About his appearance on talk shows. Jung Chang has appeared in the media commenting on Chinese issues other than her book - she was actually scheduled to appear on the first ever (and only) broadcast of the BBC's Question Time from Shanghai, until she had to drop out at the last minute. Does that make her qualified to answer any and all questions on China? I'm just curious what you think, because various people on wikipedia would say nothing she ever says is worth listening to. | |||
::You're also ignoring his point about the composition of the two suggested entries, which actually is far more important. ] 21:02, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::I'm not ignoring anything and your question about Chang being interviewed is not relevant since this is not the sum total of Dr. Gao's experience. He is an academic within the field of China Studies who writes in peer reviewed journals on the subject--that is why he is called upon for interviews, etc. Chang is known for making sensationalistic claims and author of this best seller that the western media hyper promotes--a major intellectual scandal. As far as Goa's text and Mao, how is his text book NOT relevant to Mao? He is currently working on a book that is all about Mao specifically, as well. To study modern Chinese history is to study the policies of Mao Tse-Tung.] 21:18, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::"your question about Chang being interviewed is not relevant since this is not the sum total of Dr. Gao's experience" | |||
::::It is actually perfectly relevant, because you raised the issue of his appearance on media shows. Either appearing on something like that indicates something or it doesn't. I think your last response shows you are trying to have your cake and eat it. | |||
::::You are still ignoring his last paragraph - I say that because you are not addressing it. I think you could do him the courtesy of replying on that point given he is a newcomer to the conversation. | |||
::::"To study modern Chinese history is to study the policies of Mao Tse-Tung." | |||
::::It is quite possible to study modern Chinese history '''after''' his death and not be especially knowledgable on Mao. I know some people who know incredible amounts of information on Chinese politics from the early 1980s onwards (in some cases because they lived there at that time), yet have little to say about Mao. ] 21:30, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
Giovanni, having fathomed my way through the unique intracacies of your spelling, punctuation and grammar, and before referring to all the points you address, hopefully at a later stage, I have just one thing to say: writing your own articles hardly counts as research. Before you burst forth in indignation, hear me out. One *assumes* that someone would undertake research before submitting an article, but the existence of the article is not in and of itself proof that research has been undertaken. (I am talking about Gao's articles above.) | |||
As far as the rest goes, I shall comment when you do me the courtesy of addressing how we resolve the issue of the topmost paragraphs in this section. As things stand, Gao (as mentioned in the second description) fills ill in the surroundings. Logically and linguistically, the way it has been phrased leaves a lot to be desired. | |||
My point about the BBC History <b>magazine</b> was in jest. I suggest if you cannot take the convivial yet sincere tone in which most Wikipedians conduct themselves then you should approach things with a more open mind. That way fewer arguments would arise.] 21:39, 5 April 2007 (UTC)Xmas1973 | |||
:Nowhere is this section ("13 All change") are Assoc. Prof. Gao's qualifications adequately addressed. I think we should resolve this finally before proceeding. ] 21:42, 5 April 2007 (UTC)Xmas1973 | |||
::No, but if you read further up you will see all this has been talked about before. No one questions his credencials after that, except Smith, who pretends not to see anything but his work on language.] 22:16, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::I think Xmas is questioning his credentials - at the very least he wants you to discuss them with him, rather than expect him to trapse through a very messy discussion above. ] 22:23, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::Your point about the assumptions we make when a scholar publishes scholarly material within his field of research, in a peer reviewed academic jounal goes without saying. But there is no logical reason to question that unstated premise--this he did in fact do the research that his papers indicate. The papers themselves, their subjects, the bibliography, references, etc. and where they are published, provide sufficient evidence to support such a logical assumption. We need not be concerned about it, unless you have evidence that his research is not what it looks like, similarly, with the other speculative 'possibilities" you mention above re "filler, BBC History, etc. Unless this point is also in jest? | |||
::I agree that we should stick to more relevant issues, such as the exact wording of how to report the above. As I explained before: We are quoting the article that it references. The article says it was discussed by Gao and Katz. That is important to include. So we should include that bit of info. It goes on to paraphrase Katz. We report that, quoting it. We report the actual topic the session was on, that means the name of the session, i.e. "on the distortion of history." That is important. I am not asking for anything more than these things. The raising of 'implications" being made--when even if they are being made are accurate--is not a valid reason to not report what this article reports, concerning these two quaified academics about Chang's book. The legitimate issue that has been rasied which can easily be fixed is to add in the bit about it being an academic conference.] 22:15, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::"The article says it was discussed by Gao and Katz. That is important to include." | |||
:::Why? As I keep saying, the point of the article is to put across a point made by someone who can be quoted (or paraphrased) from the article - that would be Professor Ross. The fact Gao was there is irrelevant for the purposes of this article unless he is going to be quoted on something (assuming one believes his words are worth having). By they way, why do you keep calling her Kaz - you don't know her personally, do you? | |||
:::"We report the actual topic the session was on, that means the name of the session... That is important." | |||
:::Why is it important? The article isn't about the conference, it's about a book and opinions of it. One of the reasons I objected to this in the first place was that you seemed to be using it almost to give prestige to the comments by the fact it was at this conference/even giving a profile to the conference itself. That isn't what we should be doing, we should simply say the opinion given with the briefest of comments as to where it came from. My version is completely neutral because it doesn't even begin to make a song-and-dance about the seminar/conference. ] 22:34, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::The point of this article, and this section in particular, is to give the reader the full breath and scope of scholarly reactions to this book. Giving the full context of the conference, including the fact that it was discussed by both Gao and Katz, who both talked about this book, is information that adds value to the article. It allows a reader such as myself to find out and contact Gao, and find out that he is currently working on a book that has two chapters on Mao: the Unknown Story. When we quote the article we should do it in context. That context includes a discussion by both these academics, even if we only quote one. Similarly, to report on the topic of the session gives context to the nature of the talks and presentations provided for by these academics. It doesn't give "prestige' in any way. It gives information that informs the reader of the context and subject matter where these discussion were held and why.] 23:06, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
While I dread the thought of participating in this conversation, which is already more than insane, I feel some responsibility to do so.<br /> | |||
1. Giovanni has tremendously more than adequately demonstrated Gao's credentials. Stanford University Press doesn't publish bullshit/unqualified authors.<br /> | |||
2. Gao's credentials as a modern Chinese historian are vastly more than Jung Chang, who does not even have a history PhD. It would be unbalanced to exclude Gao's name from the article without writing a section in the article about the credentials (and lack thereof) of the authors of ''Mao: The Untold Story''.<br /> | |||
3. The comment about Giovanni's poor proofreading was a cheap shot demonstrative of immaturity, especially considering that John Smith's does no better in his writing.<br /> | |||
4. So much of this argument can be attributed to viewing editing with an "either/or" attitude instead of a "both/and" one. I find this incredibly frustrating--you guys keep spinning in circles around each other. Giovanni gives the name of the session while John wants to say what the conference was about. How about this: "In a session entitled '...' at a conference on the Cultural Revolution..." That sort of compromise makes perfect sense. A similar example is the designation of the speakers. Giovanni wrote their specialty, while John wrote their university. Why not both? "Professor of East Asian Studies at the University of Tasmania."<br /> | |||
5. I will admit that it would be nice if Giovanni could cite a source in addition to the webpage on this conference. You could even mention that a book criticizing Chang is coming out; name who is publishing it and the expected release date.<br /> | |||
6. I find it unpleasantly ironic that John keeps talking about how Giovanni's paragraph isn't concise enough. The paragraph is longer because Giovanni needed to write a paragraph that addressed all of John's concerns about the context of the quote and the qualifications of the speakers.<br /> | |||
I hope and pray that everyone can stop banging their heads against the wall on this one. --] 22:32, 5 April 2007 (UTC)<br /> | |||
::Thank you Bgaulke for your comments. I completely agree with everything you said above, and I am more than happy to accomodate the proposed compromises you suggest, which are logical and much better than debating what are essentially red herrings.] 22:57, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::So once again you refuse to compromise, eh Giovanni? Quit ignoring relevant points being made. Each time you run away and refuse to answer them because to do so is to undermine your position. If you are so confident about your version, respond to the points both I and Xmas have made. If you continue to ignore them I can only assume you know you cannot answer them, so seem to bypass the argument by latching on to what others say. ] 09:43, 6 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:1. The Stanford University Press book is about modern China, not Mao or historical Chinese politics. Just because Stanford thought he did a good job on one topic doesn't mean they think he would automatically be well positioned on another one. Also I doubt any publisher is infallible. | |||
:2. Philip Short doesn't have a PhD in history, yet there are no such caveats when he is mentioned. The point is that both he and Chang wrote on Mao - plus Chang has her husband (a Prof) to back her up. I'm also slightly confused - does Gao have a PhD in History? | |||
:3. I resent the accusation I write no better than Giovanni - I do not splurge text in one big paragraph. | |||
:4. I do not think we should talk about the seminar at all. The point about the conference is a general point, like when we say Andrew Nathan was writing in the London Review of Books - we don't say he was on page such-and-such, in a certain sub-section. That's where the citation comes in - people can follow the link. | |||
:6. Giovanni's paragraph was not drawn up with me in mind. He lifted it from the article, after snipping out a bit in the middle. So you are mistaken. ] 22:48, 5 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::At very least, the choice of paragraphs above needs enlarging. Let's put our heads together for a third option, a compromise, with enough information on the one hand and relevant detail on the other to satisfy all concerned. | |||
::1. ''At a 2006 conference on the Cultural Revolution, Professor Kaz Ross of the University of Tasmania commented that "the Chang-Halliday book was only the latest in the genre of 'faction' — fiction with a cloak of facts."'' | |||
::2. ''In the session titled the "Struggles Over Representation of History," concerning the distortions of history and representation of Mao, the Chang and Halliday book was discussed by Professor of Chinese Studies, Gao Mobo, and Professor of Asian Studies, Kaz Ross, who advanced the opinion that "the Chang-Halliday book was only the latest in the genre of 'faction' — fiction with a cloak of facts."'' | |||
::3. ''At a 2006 conference on the Cultural Revolution, in a session titled the "Struggles Over Representation of History," concerning the distortions of history and representation of Mao, the Chang and Halliday book was discussed by Professor of Chinese Studies, Gao Mobo, and Professor of Asian Studies, Kaz Ross; Ross then advanced the opinion that "the Chang—Halliday book was only the latest in the genre of 'faction' - fiction with a cloak of facts."'' | |||
::This latest version incorporates both mention of Gao and identifies Ross as the sole <b>utterer</b> of the statement. It can then be argued out elsewhere Gao's opinion of connivance (or otherwise) at this statement. ] 11:19, 6 April 2007 (UTC)Xmas1973 | |||
:::Xmas, I think you're on to something. But I certainly would not say '''the''' distortions - that is not neutral enough. I would say "alleged distortions", as that is more neutral. Also I would prefer a shorter version, maybe something like: | |||
::: ''At a 2006 conference on the Cultural Revolution, in a session titled the "Struggles Over Representation of History" (concerning alleged distortions of history and representations of Mao), Professor Kaz Ross of the University of Tasmania advanced the opinion that "the Chang—Halliday book was only the latest in the genre of 'faction' - fiction with a cloak of facts."'' Brackets are certainly required to keep the flow going. ] 12:06, 6 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::: I don't think "alleged" fits well here, since the participants were discussing distortions (and whether something is or is not a distortion), not alleged distrotions (and whether something has or has not been alleged to be a distortion). | |||
:::: In any case, I don't think the qualifier is needed if you are just trying to say that Chang-Halliday may or may not be distortions. The average reader should be smart enough to figure out that being discussed at a certin conference does not conclusively define the nature of your work. --] (]) 12:21, 6 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::"The distortions" doesn't work that well either. How about "(discussing distortion of History and representations of Mao)"? ] 12:30, 6 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::Good to see some progress. I'm ok with adding Smith's suggestions above, giving us: ''At a 2006 conference on the Cultural Revolution, in a session titled the "Struggles Over Representation of History," discussing distortions of history and representation of Mao, the Chang and Halliday book was discussed by Professor of Chinese Studies, Gao Mobo, and Professor of Asian Studies, Kaz Ross; Ross advanced the opinion that "the Chang—Halliday book was only the latest in the genre of 'faction' - fiction with a cloak of facts."''] 21:58, 6 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::That isn't quite what I was thinking of. I actually think we could trim it a bit - no one cares what the seminar is called, though it might be useful to know what they were talking about. | |||
:::::::''"At a 2006 conference on the Cultural Revolution, during a seminar on distortion of History and representations of Mao, Professor Kaz Ross of the University of Tasmania advanced the opinion that "the Chang—Halliday book was only the latest in the genre of 'faction' - fiction with a cloak of facts."'' ] 23:35, 6 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::: This seems to make sense to me. Giovanni, if you want to include Gao Mobo (and I think you should), I suggest that you provide some sort of statement that he has made about the book. Just dropping his name by saying that he was at this seminar doesn't help a whole lot. For all the reader would know, Gao might have been disagreeing with Ross's assessment--which he wasn't. --] 01:34, 7 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::Prof. Gao says essentially the same thing as Kaz, they both share the same POV, and agreed with each other at the confrence. Gao infact states, "the book is not scholarship by any meaningful standard, it is a fiction dressed up as history." However, I don't see any of these papers published anywhere on the internet. It is verifiable through request of any of the scholars attending the confrence, including its organizer. About Dr. Gao's book, we can maybe mention he is working on a book about Mao that will contain two chapters on this book, but there is no release date at this time, and this fact is only verifiable by contacting the Prof. himself (as far as I can tell). About the above, stating he is a prof. of Chinese studies, I think, is better than writing in which Univerisity he teaches at; that info can be obtained from the link.] 08:31, 7 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::Giovanni, stop repeating yourself over Gao agreeing with Ross - by the way, please stop calling her "Katz". Her name is Kaz Ross, so call her Ross, Professor Ross, etc. You need to provide a source to what Gao said - readers do not necessarily know what you do, and it is against wikipedia rules to "assert" personal knowledge or say "all you have to do is e-mail him". If his views aren't accessible then that is unfortunate, but there is nothing we can do about it. | |||
::::::::::This is not the place to talk about Gao's book - that is for his wikipedia article if one is written and evidence can be provided he is working on it. | |||
::::::::::As to Ross' "title", you have to mention the university at the very least, even if their department is also listed. ] 10:27, 7 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::: I hate to say it Giovanni, but I think John Smith's is right on this one. If you can't cite a place where Gao says something about the book, then he doesn't belong on this page. Can you at least cite an article that Gao wrote that is published already? --] 18:31, 7 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::Actually, the article itself that reports what Kaz said, also reports that Gao discussed the book---it says they both did. The only thing is that this source doesn't say what Gao said, only it implies (accurately) that they agreed with each other. That is as much as I wanted to include here, but the question of including something that Gao says, in his paper, or his upcoming book about Mao, I think can be mentioned, as well because the standard is verifiability. Many things can't linked because they don't exist in link form anywhere, yet with a little research given the information we already know form the linked source, anyone can verify that the other possible statements we might want to include are accurate. There is no rule about how this is to be verfied. There are many ways. If we are going to report what University Gao is from, then this makes it easy for anyone to contact him to verify the claims I've made here. Maybe we should review the policy on this matter; I'm sure its come up before.] 07:29, 8 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
I think these polices about self-published sources might be relevant here: | |||
For good reason they are generally not accepted (blogs, any personal website, their own paper, etc). However, "Self-published material may be acceptable when produced by a well-known, professional researcher in a relevant field or a well-known professional journalist. These may be acceptable so long as their work has been previously published by reliable third-party publications." Dr. Gao would fit into the acceptable category. | |||
Also: "Self-published and dubious sources in articles about themselves | |||
Material from self-published sources, and published sources of dubious reliability, may be used as sources in articles about the author(s) of the material, so long as: | |||
it is relevant to their notability; | |||
it is not contentious; | |||
it is not unduly self-serving; | |||
it does not involve claims about third parties, or about events not directly related to the subject; | |||
there is no reasonable doubt as to who wrote it." | |||
] 07:55, 8 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:What is the self-published source? Giovanni, this is the whole point - you have repeatedly failed to provide any verifiable, accessible sources on Gao's views on the book. It is not enough to expect people to go research things themselves. Really if you keep refusing to back down or help us out then it's not going to do you any good. ] 14:11, 8 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::"The only thing is that this source doesn't say what Gao said, only it implies (accurately) that they agreed with each other. That is as much as I wanted to include here, but the question of including something that Gao says, in his paper, or his upcoming book about Mao, I think can be mentioned, as well because the standard is verifiability." Giovanni, this is an exceedingly secretive way of a) conducting research and b) sharing it. The most intellectually dishonest part, to my mind, is "that is as much as I wanted to include here". A lot less of the above discussion would have happened if you'd been willing to share this information sooner and more openly. ] 16:09, 8 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::Intellectually dishonest? Again, if you had bothered to actually follow this discussion from the beginning you would have known that I had already said this from the begining. You've never edited this article and have only jumped in now, which appears to be, only to attack me and act as a shill for John Smith. Your role here has not been helpful and I quesiton your true purpose. I hope you stop with the peronal attacks and be more constructive.] 09:43, 9 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::The very mention of Gao at this level, when you are withholding information and where, by your own admission, what he says is merely implicit, is unhelpful. I therefore propose that we leave him out unless you can show more demonstratively how he fits in relevantly and on the proviso that you provide an accessible source putting forward Gao's views on the book, as has been requested of you reasonably by John Smith's. ] 16:43, 8 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
I'm going to agree that, as it stands, it seems best to leave Gao out of the article. I will protest the accusations being made against Giovanni by Xmas1973 and John Smith's, who both insist on using unnecessarily heated rhetoric to paint him as someone who is deceptive, conniving, and solely responsible for the length of this conversation, when he is really none of those things. I would have to hold both sides of the argument equally liable for how long it has taken us to make progress on this issue. --] 19:52, 8 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::Thanks, and I do resent the personal attacks by Xmas1973, which itself casts doubt on his motivations concerning editing of this article. Back to the issue, I think we can include the fact that both Gao and Kaz discussed this book, exactly as reported by the source; the source of this article felt it was important to report on the discussion by Gao and Kaz, even if it only quoted the latter, and I agree its noteworthy. The fact that this book was discussed by both these academics in this context is relevant to this article. Let those readers who are intersted contact Gao and find out the info that I did. We need not include it here only because, as of now, we don't have a good source, but his mention in the context of the session on the book is, contrary to what Xmas asserts, very helpful, and completely honest. Also, it would be rather trivial to have Gao post information to a personal blog, and then I'd hope there would not be any objections. I'll contact him and ask if this would be a possibility. For now, though, I propose just reporting what the source reports.] 22:30, 8 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::Giovanni, are you going to keep going around in circles until we get bored and just agree with you so you will stop repeating yourself? We keep telling you, it is not enough to expect people to find out things for themselves. I'm going to ask the page be unlocked - you've had enough time to come up with something. ] 11:58, 9 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::It was Ross, not "Kaz" who made the reports above. But I'm glad this issue is close to being resolved. I retract the barb from my earlier comments, but would stand by the fact that it would be extremely disconcerting to be told as a user of Misplaced Pages to contact a source for further views. The relevant point should either be elaborated within Misplaced Pages's editorial policy and thereby contained in the article or not included at all. | |||
::::Also, would quoting from a personal blog not flout inclusion guidelines on source material? (I ask this as a genuine question and not to stir things up.) ] 13:25, 9 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::Xmas - no, I don't think it would be possible to quote from a personal blog. ] 13:41, 9 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::Blogs are not a good source, since there's very little guarantee what has been written is true. --] ] 15:47, 9 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
The page is unprotected now... --] ] 15:48, 9 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::Per policy, they ARE acceptable when produced by a well-known, professional researcher in a relevant field or a well-known professional journalist. I quoted the policy above, already. There is nothing disconerting about doing research based on information that is provided within Misplaced Pages. That is basic. Misplaced Pages is not and can not be the source for all information about any topic. The reader, if interested, must do further reasearch, and WP can be a guide for this. The relevant point to be elaborated in WP is to simply report the infomation we have from the verifiable source itself. This should not be a controversial proposition, and I insist we follow it here.] 23:00, 9 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
I've worded it thusly: | |||
"At a 2006 conference on the Cultural Revolution, during a seminar on distortion of History and representations of Mao, the Chang and Halliday book was discussed by academics from the University of Tasmania: Professor of Chinese Studies, Dr. Gao Mobo, and Professor of Asian Studies, Kaz Ross; Professor Kaz Ross stated that "the Chang—Halliday book was only the latest in the genre of 'faction' - fiction with a cloak of facts."] 23:09, 9 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:Sorry, it's not good enough. I guess you're doing this because he's your ex-tutor or something. There is no need to mention him - it just adds unnecessary length to the article. ] 11:02, 10 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::I've given the reasons to mention him. He is a qualified academic who discussed the book in the context of distortions of history with Prof. Ross Kat, and this allows the reader to do further research and obtain his papers and review of the mattere, as well as find out his is comign out with a book that contains two chapters this book.] 19:57, 10 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::Your reasons to mention him are invalid in this situation. This is not an article on Gao or the conference he attended. Unless he has something quotable and citable to say about the book, as Hong would say "for sake of brevity" he should not be mentioned. ] 09:12, 11 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::No, my ratinale is valid. There is no rule that limits the mention of an academic to actual quotes. The fact that he discused the book in the context mentione with the other professor who we do quote is worthy of inclusion for the reaons previously explained. Brevity is good, but its already breif.] 22:30, 11 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::The fact that he discussed it would be relevant *IF* you then go on to give a soundbite from that time and place emanating from the lips of Gao. That this is missing means Gao should be omitted from this article as it stands. Following John Smith's above, for brevity's sake, but for clarity's sake as well, Gao does not belong in the discussion at this point. Many people were there, and may have agreed with Ross's analysis, but their contribution is neither noteworthy nor relevant. This is where Gao falls. | |||
:::::Also, what is your issue with the words "East Asian" that you and your crowd seem so keen on deleting? ] 23:38, 11 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::I disagree. It is relevant information even without quoting Gao. Why do you think the author of the article we cite mentions Dr. Gao in this context without quoting him? Because its important and relevant information about an academic in his speciality talking about this book. What he says can be found out by some research. As of now we can't quote Gao because we are lacking a source, but that is not reason not to provide the information we do have from the sources we do have, i.e. that he discussed the book at this conference and context. You wanting to supress that because of a lack of an actual quote on the pretext of brevity is not convincing. | |||
::::::About the "East Asian" bit, I reject that as POV pushing to diminish the standard of critical views to only those scholars of "East Asia." This is simply inaccurate and not very relevant. It doesnt matter where these scholars are from as long as they are qualified scholars. Putting in "East Asia" adds more bias than it does important info.] 01:21, 12 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::The "East Asian" edit is not an invalid point. Most of the criticism listed in the article has not come from East Asians. ] <small>(] - ])</small> 00:10, 12 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::Point taken, but I speak on my own behalf and not for anyone else who made that edit. ] 09:28, 12 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::PLEASE, for the love of Allah, answer questions put to you about Gao's inclusion. You seem to have ducked most recently behind the smoke screen that was the "East Asian" debate and successfully skirted round the rather more important issue of Gao. I refer you to the final posts made by John Smith's and myself last night <i>supra</i>. ] 09:33, 12 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::This also concerns Hong's chopping of comments in the "support" section. Hong, you complain about brevity yet you unnecessarily extend the last comment to include Gao. This shows you are being hypocritical. You can't do both and yet claim to be following the same principle. As I explained previously, there are 6 "commentators" in each slot, so there's nothing wrong for each to be roughly the same length. Now, if the page is unprotected are you going to insist on chopping those bits again? | |||
:::::::As to the "East Asian" bit, Sumple has suggested "East Asian studies scholars" - does anyone have a better suggestion? ] 11:23, 12 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::::I like that, but just to remove all doubt for those too slow to grasp the point - please do not take this as a personal slight and delete it, anyone! - how about "scholars of East Asian studies"? | |||
::::::::And don't think these last few comments have made me forget about the debate about Gao's inclusion. ] 11:50, 12 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
The discussion on the book involved both Kaz and Gao. To only mention Kaz without mentioning Gao would be really intellectually dishonest. I wholly support keeping Gao in the section. As for the "East Asian" bit, if we all recognise that most of the criticism given about the book is actually not East Asian, I don't see a problem at all with just stating that "scholars" had questioned the validity of the book. ] <small>(] - ])</small> 17:18, 12 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:Why is it "intellectually dishonest"? I would say it's unneccessary. ] 18:07, 12 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::Didn't I just explained why it's intellectually dishonest? Like I said, both Gao and Kaz were in that discussion. Their names were specifically mentioned in the source. ] <small>(] - ])</small> 18:30, 12 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::No, you didn't really explain. Just because Gao was there doesn't make it dishonest to ignore him, as we cannot quote him on what he said. If anything it would be dishonest to mention him but only have a quote for Professor Ross. Also how do we know those were the only two people there? Doesn't seem like much of a forum for discussion if the only people that attended were two people from the same university with the same ideas, etc - sounds more like it was the academic equivalent of a kangaroo court. ] 18:40, 12 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::Let me repeat - the source specifically mentions both Gao and Kaz. If the source feels it necessary to mention Gao, then it would be intellectually dishonest for us not to do the same. Whether or not they are the only two people there are irrelevant, the article does not say that they are the only two people there. The article only reflects the source. ] <small>(] - ])</small> 19:13, 12 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:I concur with Hong on both these points. To limit the wording to only "east Asian" scholars is simply not accurate and introduces bias even if it were true (which its not), as it implies that there are different standards based on geography for scholars in this field. Its not relevant where scholars are from--its the academic standards and their respective field of expertise that matters.] 17:41, 12 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::By calling them scholars of East Asian studies, i) it does not introduce geographical standards to where they individually come from, ii) if anything it focuses their fields of expertise to be relevant to the matter in hand and iii) it reduces bias. There are explicitly *no* geographical standards imputed to these commentators. Indeed, by focusing their efforts on East Asian studies, they are all the more qualified, academically or otherwise, to be included. | |||
::Hong Qi Gong, or whoever you are, intellectual dishonesty applies far more to trying to sneak Gao into Ross's statement above. That debate has been resolved above (insofar as Ross is the sole attributee of the quotation involving "faction"), so I see no place for that term in further (reputable) discussion now. ] 18:37, 12 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::What you see and the reality of what others see are two quite different things. Gao is not being sneaked into Ross's statement. Gao discussed this book as well as Ross. Not quoting the former is does not equate to him saying the same things we quote as the latter saying. The context of this discussion by two academics on the subject of the Chang book is relevant. You introduce a straw man fallacy when you make the issue about who to attribute the quote to. That is not the issue. The issue is the relevance and importance of mentioning accurately the context of the discussion which took place by BOTH these academics concerning this book. That fact itself is important even if we only quote one. East Asian studies is not the correct term. I would say Historians and scholars of China studies. But, when we say scholars it is already assumed that their scholarship would be for the relevant academic fields.] 18:48, 12 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::If you did me the courtesy of reading my posts, accurately, in full and watching out for tenses, you would note that I did not say Gao was still being sneaked in anywhere. Any objective observer would be able to note that this had happened in the past, more through misunderstanding than deliberate ploy, but you are skirting the issue by pinning blame on me. I am introducing no straw men. I hope we can proceed more profitably from here. ] 19:00, 12 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::Firstly, the edit that I object to is calling them "East Asian scholars" - as most of the criticism listed in the article are actually not from East Asians. Do we have sources to say that each and every one of the criticism comes from scholars who are considered scholars of "East Asian studies"? We're applying a label to them that is not necessarily backed up by evidence. Secondly, I think it's self-evident by the discussion here that the Gao issue is most definitely ''not'' resolved. Thirdly, if you want to question my identity or whether or not I'm using sockpuppets, just keep a watch on the relevant check user request. ] <small>(] - ])</small> 19:07, 12 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::Is everyone on mogadon today? The only point I said had been resolved was that Ross was the only utterer of the relevant quotation above. We have yet to decide on Gao's inclusion per se. In future I shall have to spell things out for some participants in this discussion! | |||
::::We'd moved on from "East Asian scholars" as a verbatim tag. I see your grievance with it, and that is why I proffered "scholars of East Asian studies" as an alternative. Before it is finally shot down, let's talk this point through calmly. ] 19:26, 12 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::Do we have any evidence that the criticism listed all come from scholars that are identified as scholars of "East Asian studies"? If not, we can't make that edit. ] <small>(] - ])</small> 13:39, 13 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
Hey, Xmas, note how quiet Giovanni has got now the page is locked in his favour. He was on here so frequently last time - now he is strangely busy elsewhere...... ] 23:20, 13 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:A little good faith never hurt anyone. ] <small>(] - ])</small> 03:25, 14 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::Unfortunately I can't remember the last time he showed me any - such as his refusal to accept I don't use sockpuppets. ] 10:06, 14 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
== Protection == | |||
I have protected the page again for 2 weeks. Use this time to discuss here instead of planning how to revert again. -- ] 01:01, 12 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:I see everyone intends to revert war. Well, this page will stay protected until you agree. No objections, no technicalities, no appeals. Protected until disputes are resolved. --] ] 03:15, 12 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
== Sockpuppets / Checkuser == | |||
All parties may be interested in reading ]. I formulated this from a comment that Giovanni made about the possibility of Xmas being a sock of John Smith's. Digging up evidence has shown some interesting correlation. Also of note is that Giovanni has also been counter-accused of sockpuppetry, as I noticed evidence that he was using one too. This page serves as a check for both users. --] ] 15:04, 12 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:Interesting. Thanks for the info. ] <small>(] - ])</small> 17:19, 12 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::It's not going to change anything, Deskana. They'll still claim I'm sockpuppeting even when it's proved those people aren't me. ] 18:15, 12 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::Hey don't make any assumptions about what I'm thinking. I didn't request those user checks, and I didn't think you were the anonymous editor from Hungary anyway. But that's very interesting rhetoric here coming from someone who's been requesting user checks himself on me and Giovanni. ] <small>(] - ])</small> 18:28, 12 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::Giovanni has a history of using sockpuppets - as for you, well you listed one against me "to clear things up", so I was only doing the same in regards to you. | |||
::::Though it would be nice for you to assert you will believe the results of the check - I didn't dispute the one made against you. ] 18:37, 12 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::That's right. But unlike you, I never complained that you won't believe the checkuser results. ] <small>(] - ])</small> 13:42, 13 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::So answer this question - do you believe the results? ] 17:43, 13 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::Exactly how much hand-holding do you require? Of course I believe the results. ] <small>(] - ])</small> 21:20, 13 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::::I require people to make clear statements so I can hold them to those comments in the future. If you think a request to be specific is "hand-holding" then there's something wrong with you. ] 22:18, 13 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
== Let's try something == | |||
I propose we try something. It's quite a harsh way of doing things, but to be honest, you're all going round in circles. It's possibly a bit against the wiki philosophy, but I can't see anything else working, and this will '''only''' work if you all agree to it. What I propose is the following steps... | |||
#All involved parties discuss matters of conflict with each other, until they feel that they'll never reach a solution. | |||
#As soon as the above occurs, you contact me, and all involved parties state their views. All other editors either Support it, Oppose it, or are Neutral. There will be '''no''' commenting on other people's statements, to avoid arguments, but every single person will have the right to make their own statement. | |||
#I will propose a few solutions based on relevant policies. This will more than likely not be one person's views, but a combination of them. People can Support, Oppose or be Neutral as before. | |||
#In the end, I can, if needed, impose a binding decision based on one of the proposals as outlined above. Hopefully this step won't be necessary as you can all agree on one of the compromises. | |||
This is a rather drastic way of doing things, but we're going nowhere. '''This will only work if everyone agrees to it''', because I can't (potentially) impose binding solutions. This'll probably take place on some article talk subpage. | |||
So what do you all say? --] ] 14:48, 14 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:Basically, this is my attempt at mediating the dispute, and mediation obviously only works if everyone agrees to it. --] ] 17:07, 14 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
===Discussion of above proposal=== | |||
Sounds like a good idea. We aren't getting anywhere - the only other solution Deskana has is that we're all banned from editing the article. ] 14:55, 14 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:It may be unduly optimistic but is there any way we can avoid reaching a stalemate as proposed at step 1 above? I notice Giovanni33 is maintaining an effective silence. Please can we all try to have one last stab at cracking this nut? ] 22:02, 14 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
Sounds good. ] <small>(] - ])</small> 02:15, 15 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
Please chip in if you think there is anything else, but I see the main sticking points as follows: | |||
#inclusion of Gao when referring to criticism of the Chang and Halliday book; | |||
#reference to "East Asian" in relation to the scope of those who have reviewed the book | |||
. ] 09:58, 15 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
<p>3. agreement all round not to prolong the edit war by making niggling or even slowly encroaching changes to the final text (pending new developments on the factual or scholarly fronts) once we have (potentially) settled the issues. ] 11:12, 15 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:Basically, we should come up with a final version that we can all agree with, correct? ] <small>(] - ])</small> 16:20, 15 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:So no more edit waring about these two issues means we leave the current text on these two points unchanged until we reach consensus for any accepted changes here. In essense, these to points are to be in that same status as now "protected" on the honor system, and we open up the rest of the article to improvement/editing. I'd support this.] 18:25, 15 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::I made that point about edit-warring in my earlier post, Giovanni! And no, protection does not amount to any endorsement whatsoever of the current version, so I dislike your proposal intensely. It is slovenly, cowardly and worst of all unfair. A better option, fairer all round, would be to start with a blank canvas, and then debate the earlier points, ironing out as best we can the issues above. At that point we review whether we have to follow Deskana's arbitration policy. | |||
::Hong, you've got it spot on. John, are you happy with that? ] 20:11, 15 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::I am happy that we need to agree on a final version. | |||
:::I also object to Giovanni's suggestion about leaving the two points as they are now because they are the entire reason the page was locked. He didn't suggest that when Gao was not included, so it is rather manipulative to suggest this now they are to his liking. The page should stay locked until we agree on how to address these important points. ] 22:39, 15 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::'''Page protection is not an endorsement of the current version'''. You can read what you want into what version the page was protected on, but once more, '''page protection is not an endorsement of the current version'''. End of discussion. --] ] 02:51, 17 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::Giovanni . So does that mean you will ban him from editing the article if he does not respect the final view? I don't see how we can move forward if he keeps digging his heels in. ] 18:04, 17 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::I don't have the authority to ban editors. Only Jimbo, the arbitration committee, or the community as a whole can ban users. I think an RfC is in order, but right now I don't have the time to organise one. --] ] 18:07, 17 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::I don't really see the point in RfC, as it's not binding and Giovanni has shown he is not willing to change his mind. We have already gone through the first four steps of ]. So if anything we should be heading to arbitration - it's the only way to resolve this once and for all. At the least we need mediation with an agreement from all parties that the mediator can make a final decision. Unless of course it is possible for a RfC to be binding (again assuming the editors agree to it being binding). | |||
::::::Also I am wary of the page protection being lifted just on the Gao matter. Giovanni is cooking up a storm on the ] page by insisting on inclusion of another link. Even if we can somehow resolve the Gao issue, it is clear he will insist on adding the unofficial book review after protection is lifted. So we need to tie the two issues together to ensure they are dealt with at the same time, even if they are to be resolved separately. ] 18:13, 17 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::To be honest, you and Giovanni have been "disagreeing" with each other on more than just this article and ]. You two have also been at it on ], ], ], and who knows what other articles. The real issue here seems to be more than a content dispute, it seems you two just can't seem to agree with each other. ] <small>(] - ])</small> 18:30, 17 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::::We don't get along, which is why we need something that gives a firm judgment. Otherwise it is just a waste of time. ] 18:37, 17 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::Oh, so do you feel the issue has elevated beyond simple content disputes? This is an honest question because personally I can comment on the dispute for this particular article, but I don't think I know enough about the other disputes to be much help in any mediation efforts. And these multiple-article disagreements don't exactly lend the most support for good faith assumption toward the two of you - meaning it's easy for someone to think that you and Giovanni might be disagreeing with each other on more than the strength of the content itself, maybe you're disagreeing with each other just because you don't like each other. ] <small>(] - ])</small> 19:07, 17 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::Personally I am willing to discuss the facts, but I feel Giovanni's attitude towards me clouds his judgement. If I disagreed with something because he did, I would not have included the reference by Professor Ross. ] 19:26, 17 April 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::For me its always been about simple and honest content disputes--on my part. I can not speak for John Smith's intentions although I assume good faith. However, I do dislike the contant personal attacks by him and his new friends against me, even if it takes the form of indirect, inuendo, etc. I would ask him to only comment on the issues, instead of editors.] 21:07, 17 April 2007 (UTC) |
Latest revision as of 11:39, 7 September 2022
This is an archive of past discussions about Mao: The Unknown Story. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
Archive 1 | ← | Archive 5 | Archive 6 | Archive 7 |
See also links
I wondered why there is no "See also" links, that is why I began to add links. If other editors disagree with the links I add, we can have a discussion here. Any thoughts? Arilang 18:51, 24 November 2009 (UTC)
- There is no requirement that every article have seealsos (in fact, MOS can be interpreted to mean that it's better not to have seealsos if possible), so the fact that there weren't any is not a problem.
- The links you were adding are not relevant to this article. Most were books/articles about communism (and mostly about Russian communism), not about Mao in particular; this article is the exact opposite, it's about Mao and not about communism (and if you've read the book, you would see that Chang believes communism is not even that relevant—she thinks it was just a path he took to gain power and that he didn't care that much about it ideologically. Many would disagree with that analysis, but since it's what's in the book then that's what's relevant to this article). Others were about specific historical events and not really relevant to an article about a book. rʨanaɢ /contribs 18:56, 24 November 2009 (UTC)
- Well, first of all, wikipedia is to help readers to learn, to broaden the horizon of knowledge, to learn more things. This book is more about Mao, that I agree; but if we take Mao out of the context of Chinese revolution, which was both insipired and funded by the Russian communist, and more over, if we remove all the elements of communism, that means if we take out the Comintern elements, then readers would only be able to see Mao in a very limited and vague kind of perspective.
What I am saying is, the Red October Revolution and the Chinese CCP(hence Mao Zedong) is very much linked together. Without the October Revolution, there would not be any Mao. Arilang 19:13, 24 November 2009 (UTC)
- Comintern's funding of CCP:
- 斯大林政權对中共之援助
- (季米特洛夫于1941年7月2日向莫洛托夫等送交了要求向中国党提供200万美元援款的建议书。联共(布)中央讨论后,次日即批准马上援助中国同志100万美元。但此一援款拖到16日仍未能发出,原因是中国(南京)政府对苏联方面要求派飞机飞往延安一事迟迟不予答复。据此,季米特洛夫明确致信莫洛托夫提出)"由于使中国同志尽快获得至少是一半的援助非常重要,我们相信有必要采取非法的方式用飞机通过蒙古发送运费。"
- 季米特洛夫日記
- 给八路军武器援助,这要苏联政府决定,不过照他的看法,假若援助了,这可能不是帮助了你们,而是害了你们。...因为这会恶化国共关系并为国民党孤立和封锁延安提供口实。最后,....共产国际从它的外汇中拨出三十万美元送给中国共产党。
- 徐则浩:《王稼祥传》,当代中国出版社1996年版,第296-297页。
- 援助中国共产党50万美元。(2月17日的日记中,季米特洛夫记下了与斯大林、莫洛托夫谈话后的结果.)
- 季米特洛夫日記
- Such links might be relevant in the article on Mao Zedong (and most are probably already present in the main text). They're not relevant in the article about this book.
- As for "broadening the horizon of learning"... that is only possible if links given are restricted to those that are relevant. If a reader is given a sea of links, he won't follow any of them. Otherwise, you could just say that every article in the encyclopedia should link to every other article (millions of see-alsos). rʨanaɢ /contribs 19:38, 24 November 2009 (UTC)
- No, I am not saying every article should link to every other article, please do not put words into my mouth. What I am saying is:
- If we take out Communism from Mao, then there is nothing left. In fact, Communism has provide Mao the center stage.
- Joseph Stalin was the most important supporter of Mao, without Stalin, there would not be any Mao. q:zh:约瑟夫·史達林
- (1941年11月11日接见被选派回国的王明、康生等人时的谈话内容)共产国际书记处的决定已经过时了(指王明在西安事变欲殺掉蔣介石之提議)...这就是人们坐在办公室里冥思苦想的结果!....对于中国共产党现在基本的问题是:融入全民族的浪潮并取得领导地位...中国人怎样打击外部敌人-这是决定性的问题。当这一问题结束时,再提出怎样互相打的问题!
- 季米特洛夫日記
If we follow this argument, the links to those anti-communism authors would be very much relevent.
- Still irrelevant. Sure, communism is closely related with Mao, but the book is not about communism in general, and adding a pile of communism links to the article is not helpful. You can speculate all you want about where Mao would be without communism, but that doesn't change what this article is about. rʨanaɢ /contribs 20:58, 24 November 2009 (UTC)
- I would like to challenge you removal of all the links in a kind of adamant way. What about we discuss the links one of a time, and invite other editors to join in, instead of only you and me? Arilang 21:09, 24 November 2009 (UTC)
- Autumn Harvest Uprising
- Shu Fan movement
- Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
- The Gulag Archipelago
- One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich
- The Great Terror
- Great Purge
- Darkness at Noon
- Moscow Trials
- Anne Applebaum
- R.J. Rummel
- Richard Pipes
- Robert Conquest
- Victims of Communism Memorial
- You are welcome to invite others to the discussion. rʨanaɢ /contribs 21:19, 24 November 2009 (UTC)
- And in response to your list of links, here are why most of them are not applicable. Almost all of them are several levels of relationship away from Mao: The Unknown Story:
- Autumn Harvest Uprising: Relevant to the article on Mao himself, not relevant here (unless as an inline link somewhere)
- Shu Fan movement: One purge. Maybe relevant to the article on Mao himself, not relevant here.
- Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn: Writer known for his work on Russia, no work on China.
- The Gulag Archipelago: Book by the above, not about China.
- One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich: same.
- Great Purge: Historical event in Russia, not in China.
- Darkness at Noon: Fiction book about Soviet prison
- Moscow Trials: Historical event in Russia; no direct analogue in PRC history
- Anne Applebaum: Journalist with a focus on Eastern Europe
- R.J. Rummel: Professor who happens to have written one book about China. The book might be relevant if it had an article; the man is not.
- Richard Pipes: Russian historian, no significant work on China
- Robert Conquest: same
- The Great Terror: Book by the above, not about China.
- Victims of Communism Memorial: physical monument in D.C., happens to mention the Cultural Revolution but that's about it
- Arilang, based on your past work, I know you have a strong anti-PRC POV, and here it just looks like you're trying to add in as many links to ugly, negative things to add more negative associations to Mao. I am certainly not a pro-Mao person, but I object to your POV-pushing. rʨanaɢ /contribs 21:29, 24 November 2009 (UTC)
- Strong anti-PRC POV, I guess not. Put it this way, after reading many original CCP documents:s:zh:作者:中國共產黨中央委員會 and s:zh:作者:共产国际, the CCP, hence Mao, could only be viewed as a gang of plotters and conspirators, because most of the time their activities were about back stabbing and mud slingling. CCP cannot be viewed as a what we commonly know as a normal political party, thus, Mao cannot be viewed as a commonly known politician.
- Let me run another quote from Chinese wikipedia(of the same name):
“ | 香港《開放》月刊总编辑金鐘声称,毛泽东不为人知的故事还很多,未来会一部一部问世。「毛逝世三十年来,第一个十年有李锐的《庐山会议实录》;第二个十年有李志绥的《毛泽东私人医生回忆录》;第三个十年就是张戎夫妇的《毛泽东:鲜为人知的故事》。这是具有里程碑意义的。」的。」 | ” |
- 里程碑意义 translated as: of milestone significance.
- In my opinion(NPOV or not), to say that the book is about Mao, and Mao only, is both adament, and wrong. To put it in the right context, the book is about Mao and communist revolution, Mao and Chinese civil war, Mao and KMT, Mao and Second Sino-Japanese War, Mao and Comintern. To delete all these links is simply wrong. Arilang 23:26, 24 November 2009 (UTC)
- If you think this book is not first and foremost about Mao, you should look again at the first page (all about Mao), the last page (about Mao's body at Tiananmen), the front cover, the title page, or any other page in the book. And you still haven't demonstrated why these links are relevant (what does the CCP's status as "plotters and conspirators" have to do with that?).
- And about your anti-PRC POV? "the CCP, hence Mao, could only be viewed as a gang of plotters and conspirators". I rest my case. rʨanaɢ /contribs 02:17, 25 November 2009 (UTC)
- I simply find the dogmatic insistence on the placement of these links in contravention to WP:ALSO and thus should obviously be removed. I second Rjanag. Colipon+(Talk) 02:22, 25 November 2009 (UTC)
Third opinion: Adding in all of those links is disruptive to the article and is wholly unneeded. — HelloAnnyong 03:08, 25 November 2009 (UTC)
- I tend to agree with the point-by-point reasoning of Rjanag above. I do not see the links having 'informative' value. In fact, I believe they may even risk giving undue emphasis to a particular viewpoint, or creating an opinion by synthesis. Ohconfucius 03:05, 15 April 2010 (UTC)
Balancing Praise and Criticism
The article says: later reviews from China specialists included both support of the book's general conclusions and, from some, criticism of the book's documentation and selective use of sources.
Don't expect anyone whose done serious research into Mao or Chinese history to believe this. As WP stands for a neutral point of view, I think it is fair that we present both sides of the story. But let's be honest here, the "praise" for this book largely came out of American (and European) newspapers in their "book review" sections while the vast majority of academics rejected the book outright. I am clueless as to who actually "supported" the book's "general conclusions" and what basis they have for it. There is not a single sinologist that would vouch for the credibility of this book, and most have criticized it, some very sharply. When the sole purpose of the book is to destroy Mao's reputation, and the author is someone who is obviously extremely invested in the period, it is impossible to say that the book is in any way objective. Colipon+(Talk) 13:47, 27 November 2009 (UTC)
- I agree with you. As someone familiar with this book, I found that sentence misleading. I've adjusted it to read, more honestly, as: "The book became a best-seller in the United Kingdom and North America. Initial reviews gave warm praise, but later reviews from China specialists were generally negative, in particular criticism of the book's documentation and selective use of sources."76.14.42.191 (talk) 23:37, 8 January 2010 (UTC)
- Hi, Colipon. There was academic praise for the book - it wasn't just journalists. I can think of at least three China specialists in the article that generally praised the book - Perry Link, Stuart Schram and Richard Baum. In regards to being "invested" in the period, are you suggesting that any survivor of the Cultural Revolution would be disqualified from writing an "objective" history? Maybe in that case Chinese people generally are too invested in the Sino-Japanese War and shouldn't be writing about it.
- As for your last comment, where does the article say it was an objective book? We're not here to review it, so unless there's a claim to the contrary already in there I'm not sure what point you're making. John Smith's (talk) 18:32, 27 November 2009 (UTC)
- Thanks for the reply. I am merely asking for two things: 1. Sure, some have said that the book "contributes to understanding of Mao", but who actually supports the "book's general conclusions"? There were so many conclusions of the book, which one? That Mao was a power-hungry monster who killed tens of millions? That he never brushed his teeth? Its claims about Luding bridge??; 2. the criticism of the book is much more than about the methodology and selective use of sources. It was called a "major disaster in the contemporary China field". There was an immense amount of criticism. The current lede does not do justice to how the book is actually seen in the academic community. Colipon+(Talk) 18:56, 27 November 2009 (UTC)
- First, I don't think anyone can claim one of the book's general conclusions was that Mao did not brush his teeth. The intention of the part of the lead you refer to is clear in its meaning/intent.
- Second, the lead is trying to avoid making a judgment on how much praise and criticism there has been, what weight should be attached to which views, etc. It is honestly trying to be neutral. This isn't the place to debate or evaluate the book or the views of it. John Smith's (talk) 19:31, 27 November 2009 (UTC)
Can we perhaps cut the "praise" and "Criticism" headings and just fit both under a heading called "Critical reception"? After all, not all the "praise" commentary was positive, and not all "criticism" was negative. Reviewers don't just say if a book is good or bad. Colipon+(Talk) 12:09, 30 November 2009 (UTC)
- I wouldn't have a problem with that, though in the past some people have objected to removing certain criticisms/praises and/or curtailing them. I don't like lots of sub-headings.
- By the way, I stress that I'm happy with change - just that it should be change by consensus given the trouble we've had in the past (though a certain person's ban has ensured things are resolved more peacefully now). John Smith's (talk) 12:21, 30 November 2009 (UTC)
- Let's keep our focus on the book itself, Mao: The Unknown Story, not Praise and Criticism, it seems to me this Praise and Criticism getting larger and larger. To use an analogy, Praise and Criticism is just like tea and coffee, or deserts, and the Book itself is the main course. To spend large amount of time talking about tea and coffee, and keep ignoring the main course, is simply a waste of time.
However, talking about Criticism, CCP should be the one that making all the fuss, because June Chang had said a lot of nasty things about their Beloved dear leader. Since the book's publication(2005?), the CCP had not made even a single statement condemning June Chang and her husband, and their book. Doesn't it tell us somethings? Arilang 02:15, 1 December 2009 (UTC)
- Her name is not June. And plenty of people other than the CCP have criticized the book. And what does this comment contribute to the discussion? rʨanaɢ /contribs 02:22, 1 December 2009 (UTC)
- To coin a Chinese phrase, 皇帝不急太監急, translation: The Emperor is relax, and not worried, but the eunuchs are worried to death. What I am saying is, the CCP(as the Emperor), from 2005 to 2009, four years already, had kept quiet about Mao: The Unknown Story, beside banning it's sale and distribution in China, though the mainland Chinese netizens still are able to read it somehow, the CCP did not bother to offer any counter-claims at all, whereas those so called China experts and sinologists are making big noise on the errors of the book. Well, like the Chinese themselves say, when the Emperor himself couldn't care less, and these eunuchs are jumping up and down. I hope this analogy brings a clear message. Arilang 03:00, 1 December 2009 (UTC)
- Did you ever consider that maybe historians have the right to have their own opinions, regardless of what the CCP thinks? Or do you believe that if the CCP isn't concerned about someone, no one else should be either? rʨanaɢ /contribs 03:02, 1 December 2009 (UTC)
- Just FYI, Arilang has been making these kinds of statements about China both in Talk pages and in article content for a while now. So take what he says with a grain of salt. Hong Qi Gong (Talk - Contribs) 15:09, 1 December 2009 (UTC)
- Did you ever consider that maybe historians have the right to have their own opinions, regardless of what the CCP thinks? Or do you believe that if the CCP isn't concerned about someone, no one else should be either? rʨanaɢ /contribs 03:02, 1 December 2009 (UTC)
- To coin a Chinese phrase, 皇帝不急太監急, translation: The Emperor is relax, and not worried, but the eunuchs are worried to death. What I am saying is, the CCP(as the Emperor), from 2005 to 2009, four years already, had kept quiet about Mao: The Unknown Story, beside banning it's sale and distribution in China, though the mainland Chinese netizens still are able to read it somehow, the CCP did not bother to offer any counter-claims at all, whereas those so called China experts and sinologists are making big noise on the errors of the book. Well, like the Chinese themselves say, when the Emperor himself couldn't care less, and these eunuchs are jumping up and down. I hope this analogy brings a clear message. Arilang 03:00, 1 December 2009 (UTC)
- I suggest we keep the CPC and Mao seperate. The current policies of the CPC, though they aren't stated that way openly, are a complete repudiation of mao and every thing he stood for.Teeninvestor (talk) 18:12, 1 December 2009 (UTC)
- The CCP today is not relevant towards this article, apart from the fact it still says Mao was 70% good, 30% bad and has banned this book from sale in China. John Smith's (talk) 19:23, 1 December 2009 (UTC)
- The CCP does not say Mao is 70% good, 30% bad. Deng Xiaoping said Mao is 70% good, 30% bad, one to defend his own anti-Maoist ideology, and two to preserve the legitimacy of the Communist revolution. The CCP is extremely critical of Maoist policies, although stops short at being critical of Mao the person. For example, a few years ago, two people got arrested for wanting to "revert China back to the Mao era", and got similar charges to democracy activists. Colipon+(Talk) 15:39, 4 December 2009 (UTC)
- Deng's comments are still the official party line and more importantly books strongly critical of Mao are banned/not for sale in China. If it were the case that the CCP really had moved on from Mao, his portrait would not be hanging over the Forbidden Palace entrance and there would be much more literature on him (i.e. stuff saying he was a bad leader for China). The fact that Vladmir Putin says Stalin was a good guy does not mean he wants to bring back Communism (economically at least). Similarly the fact the CCP does not want a return to Mao's policies does not mean they cannot regard him positively. John Smith's (talk) 20:07, 4 December 2009 (UTC)
- In any case my point was that the CCP is only relevant in regards to whether they do something about the book (e.g. ban it as they have) or Mao. John Smith's (talk) 20:36, 4 December 2009 (UTC)
Exactly what we were talking about? "Balancing Praise and Criticism", we were not talking about the role of CCP. In my opinion, the article's Praise and Criticism section is getting too large in relation to the main content of the article, and needs to be trimmed. Please stay within the topic. Arilang 22:25, 5 December 2009 (UTC)
- What?? You're the one who started complaining about the CCP. rʨanaɢ /contribs 22:52, 5 December 2009 (UTC)
- I'd like to point out that "balance" should not falsely imply "equality' but reflect the fact that the amount of coverage should balance the general opinions in the academic world, and there has been much more criticism than praise. Accordingly I have restored some of the criticism that was removed, and added in own addition. This, along with fixing the sentence, mentioned above, I feel is a more honest balance.76.14.42.191 (talk) 23:41, 8 January 2010 (UTC)
- It is not possible to say for the purposes of Misplaced Pages what the "general opinions in the academic world" are as only a tiny number of academics have given any feedback on this book. Your opinion is that, an opinion, even if you feel you are 100% right. Accordingly I don't agree with your changes, including those to the lead section.
- The use of feedback on the book should be used sparingly. There is already a view that we need to reduce, not increase, views and make a single section on it. The things you inserted/reverted added nothing to the article whatsoever, and the last point on the Marxist cheerleading Communism is mostly irrelevant to the book. However, the fact that some critics of the book were still critical of Mao is important because it shows that praise/criticism didn't divide according to people's views of Mao.
- I suggest that we start with the earlier version and try some experimentation in a sandbox before introducing a consensus revision. John Smith's (talk) 00:34, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
- We are entitled to our own opinion, but not our own facts. The facts we report on, and factually, I've added to the critical reception of this book. Why do you say it should be only done so 'sparingly"? What I added, by definition, added to the article, so I fail to see your argument to censor the important voices of those that criticize this book. I see above, other editors agreed with me (or I agreed with them, which is why I looked at it and made the changes accordingly). I only see you as the sole editor standing in the way of this progress. I hope you have better arguments for keeping out my additions. Until you do, or there is clearly a consensus against it, I will restore.76.14.42.191 (talk) 00:46, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
- Because this is an article on the book, not a collection of every view ever expressed on it. If you want to create an article titled "views on MTUS", you can post to your heart's content. But there has to be balance here, which means limiting views.
- Do not misrepresent the comments of others. Other editors supported combining the praise and criticism sections to make them smaller overall. It is you who is working against that by trying to make the sections bigger, not smaller. It is also up to you to change by consensus as you are introducing new material and overturning a long-standing set-up. You should stop reverting - please read the rules I pasted on your talk page. John Smith's (talk) 00:52, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
- If you know the rules, why are you violating them by revering my changes? I do not represent anyone's comments, however it appears you are doing so. See above, I refer to user: Colipon+. This is about the question of balance, as I stated above, and which you have not addressed, yet. Also, please drop the straw-man fallacy about 'every review ever expressed." This is, again, about appropriate balance, and I see more editors agreeing with me than you, the lone voice holding back this change.76.14.42.191 (talk) 00:56, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
- It isn't against the rules to disagree with someone and undo their changes - it's against the rules to revert four times in 24 hours. I haven't done that, and I won't revert your changes again for some time if I do at all. So far it's just me and you, so how can editors agree with you before they've even seen what you've done? As I suggest on your talk page I suggest you revert yourself to avoid being reprimanded for breaking the 3RR. John Smith's (talk) 01:01, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
- I see. We'll I suggest we allow other editors impute then, before we continue with reverting one way or another. I made changes based on other editors above bringing out these points that I agreed with. The arguments are clear and I found your responses unpersuasive, and saw no other editor agreeing with you. My additions fix a number of problems that have been raised. The issue of making it one section or two is not a problem, and not a major issue (I don't care about that issue). I do care about balance of views reflecting the reality of how this book is reviewed by academics, and not painting a false picture of 'equality.' I also feel that the additions add value in conveying this. Like I said, lets see what other editors say. I will not revert if I am the lone voice here, and since you appear to be so, based on the comments above, I hope you will take the same tact.76.14.42.191 (talk) 01:09, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
- I had a discussion with one person, Colipon. No one else commented on what I said, so how can I be the lone voice? We were both the lone voices if anyone was.
- Furthermore it was Colipon who suggested merging praise and criticism - I agreed with that. Do you agreee with that? John Smith's (talk) 01:23, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
- I already commented and have no opinion on merging it into one or not. Again, this is not the issue at hand. Colipon commented on the lopsided balance given by suggesting that both pro and con have equal weight, and which I commented on, above, from both the sections and the header. This view can also be seen in the edit summary, which you reverted, that stated, "The amount of coverage balances the general opinions in the academic world. There has been much more criticism than praise." You reverted it, taking out even more reviews that were critical.76.14.42.191 (talk) 01:35, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
- Well I think you should consider an opinion because it will be hard to come up with consensus if we can't even agree the basic structure. Could you agree to use a combined section as a starting point to work on?
- Colipon raised a concern and I responded to it. We then posted another comment each - he didn't respond directly to my last point. The conversation moved on to improving the article by a combined section. Which is why I suggest it as a basis to start with. John Smith's (talk) 01:39, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
I think we should keep it separate because of the length of the its critical reception; this book, it is true, has been blisteringly ridiculed as a monster fairy tale, and looking over the changes, I see most of them as a definite improvement. I don't agree, however, with some of the changes. Raymond Lotta, while an interesting Maoist writer I'm familiar with, in all fairness represents a political fringe. Also it's true the section is getting rather large, although I see this as secondary in import. I do agree with the overall point made by the editor making the changes and not that he/she was actually restoring something that appear to have been taking out without any consensus or discussion, and make other changes that have been suggested as being needed. For example, I note that one editor removed some of the critcal reviews, and then John Smith stated he was reverting that, however, in actuality, he removed even more of the critical reviews, cutting more, and not reverting as stated: http://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Mao%3A_The_Unknown_Story&action=historysubmit&diff=328785074&oldid=328749527 I don't see these changes as discussed or being done with consensus, so restoring it really going back to the long standing version that needs consensus in order to change. I will attempt a compromise edit and try to help out.98.207.245.65 (talk) 05:21, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
As a graduate student in Modern Chinese History, I can safely say that users such as Colipon understand the matter most clearly. To quote another intelligent reader above, "I'd like to point out that "balance" should not falsely imply "equality' but reflect the fact that the amount of coverage should balance the general opinions in the academic world". Without sounding condascending, user John Smith's is substantially incorrect to state "only a tiny number of academics have given any feedback on this book. Your opinion is that, an opinion, even if you feel you are 100% right." In actual fact, this is not opinion, but established concensus among specialists. If you do the appropriate research, you and any other rational reader will come to the same conclusion. Particularly glaring is the belief that a "tiny number" of academics have weighed in. In actual fact, teh academic response to this book has been overwhelming and significantly broader than the average publication, even of scholarly stature. In fact, I have not in my studies ever seen anything quite like it. Perhaps you are not aware of the amount of reviews it has received. I would politely ask you to turn to an excellent historiographic essay written in 2006 by PhD student Brent Haas (http://orpheus.ucsd.edu/chinesehistory/pgp/brentmaoessay.htm) for an overview. Since that time, even more criticism has poured out of the academy. For these reasons, I have corrected the lead section of the article with what is currently accepted among historians, and added a new paragraph to the criticism section which I suggest you consult for recent additions to the debate. I strongly suggest that any future reversions be tempered by the necessary research and not personal affront at changes made to a public article. Dio free (talk) 07:46, 30 March 2010 (UTC)
Two cents
- About the lede: calling anything "a controversial X" should be avoided, it's simply poor style (almost as bad as writing an article about a person and saying "Joe Schmoe is a notable X"...it's very wiki-internal language, and doesn't benefit the reader). If the controversy surrounding something is noteworthy, work it into the article itself, and perhaps later in the lede say something like "X generated controversy because of its Y"; that sounds much better, and isn't inherently POV like the other wording. (For an example off the top of my head, see Not One Less—there was some controversy about this film, but the lede of the article never says "Not One Less is a controversial film about...".) For what it's worth, the previously-existing version that 76.14.42.191 was replacing this edit ("Mao... is an 832-page-long book") was also junk, but for different reasons. I have edited the opening sentence to make it simpler and avoid unnecessary qualifiers.
- About the reviews: there is already a problem in the article, which is that there seems to have been a propensity to devote entire paragraphs to individual reviews, making the article difficult to read. Adding even more large paragraphs for one or two reviews () is not helping the situation (see Don't add sewage to the already polluted pond). What really needs to be done to clean this up is to sit down and make an outline and determine what the major points (of both praise and criticism) in the reviews are, and then briefly cite the various reviews that fit under each point. These 'critical reception' sections should be organized around the points, not organized around the reviewers. That's more reader-friendly: the readers care what the major points were, they generally don't care who the reviewers are. That sort of organization will also cut down on length and dryness, which currently is a weakness in the article—a lot of readers, myself included, simply don't bother to sit down and read through the whole thing because it's boringly written and rambles on and on. rʨanaɢ /contribs 06:30, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
- I agree with both your points. We shouldn't include reviewers for the sake of it, and I think a combined section would do this well. It's too long as it is. John Smith's (talk) 13:51, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
- Ok, I'll take these points under consideration and attempt to go back at the bat with some of my own changes that reflect this, and still incorporate some of the good changes that were made earlier. But, my point, which seems to escape people here is that the changes that I restored were the original, long standing version already, and those things were taken out without any discussion and hence no consensus. So, to keep things the way they were, the consensus version, is to not revert it back to what it is now, but to what it was before taking out the critical section reviews! I'll try to trim it down, anyway, but it seems to me that taking several out completely to make it the same size as the praise section amounts to whitewashing, creating the false appearance of equity between pro/con, and leaves the reader not getting a clear sense of the utter devistating nature of those critical reviews, which accurately reflects the opinion of the academy.98.207.245.65 (talk) 19:31, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
I'm glad to see more discussion and progress being made. I can live with the changes and I mostly agree with the other IP user, above. Although, I will say that I disagree about the Lotta removal (although I can live with it, if other editors don't agree with me). My point for including the Lotta review was to simply have the full spectrum of views represented, and to counter the message that "everyone views Mao as a monster' which would not be accurate, Lotta being a case in point. But, I wont re-insert that without getting consensus as I think that is the proper way to go about this. I'm glad the other parts were restored, since as you point out, they were removed without discussion in the first place.76.14.42.191 (talk) 22:20, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
I did a little trimming and moving around, adding spacing and italics. I also found redundancies, even references that were repeated with the same content, which I removed, of course. I went back into the earlier versions and found some better wordings, as well. I look forward to comments about my changes. I think its easier to read now, and gives the proper weight/balance to the respective sections.76.14.42.191 (talk) 22:59, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
- What did Rjiang say about not making changes without reaching consensus first? We should reset the page to his version and use a sandox. That's the best way to reach consensus without disruption. John Smith's (talk) 23:17, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
- Yes, but has been pointed out by others, the restored material was in the article recently and recently taken out by you, and so by this same logic it should stay back in until there is this 'consensus" right? You can't take out material and then say to put it back in requires us to work in the sandbox first. What kind of logic is that? 76.14.42.191 (talk) 23:20, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
- It was in the article recently because it was added recently. Someone had tried to jam it all in ages ago, but that was rejected not long after. The consensus was that it would stay out. That's the logic behind it. John Smith's (talk) 23:25, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
And, I'm referring to this, where a section of the critical reviews were taking out: and then followed by your edit which claimed to 'revert" however, instead of actually reverting what you did was take out even more sourced material from only the critical section: So restoring this material under there is a discussion and consensus seems to be what you are saying is the proper thing to do.76.14.42.191 (talk) 23:25, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
- The material I removed on 30th November was added the same day, also being text that a now banned user had added in multiple times in an attempt to keep in. So how did its inclusion on 30th November become consensus in less than 24 hours? John Smith's (talk) 23:29, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
- If that is true, I stand corrected, however, I don't see it as being true. Please show me the link where the same material that both you and the other editor took out on Nov. 30th, was actually something new that was inserted that same day. If you can show me that, then I would have been mistaken about this. However, even is this is true, I think its more helpful to address the actual arguments instead of best procedure, about what was first, etc. Lets talk about the arguments, which has been made, i.e. that the criticism section should be larger than the praise section and to make the the same would be to give undue weight by making both praise and negative reception look as if they were equal, then that is hardly the case.76.14.42.191 (talk) 00:59, 10 January 2010 (UTC)
- I'll try to explain again. Someone inserted this material (or stuff very similar to it) quite some time ago - over a year I think. It was disputed very quickly and didn't stay in. For a year or more it wasn't there. On 30th someone tried to add it back in. I removed it on the same day. Is that clear? It never became part of a consensus version of the page so by removing it I cannot have been undoing any consensus. John Smith's (talk) 01:21, 10 January 2010 (UTC)
- Ok, I really needed to see the links to see what you were talking about, but I went back more carefully to take a look and you are party right, and I'm party right. What was really new materially that was inserted was the section by Historian Li Yongzhong from Taiwan, and so I will remove that to show good faith with the process. However, there are other sections that were removed and was NOT part of that new edition on that day, so that is what caught my attention.76.14.42.191 (talk) 01:41, 10 January 2010 (UTC)
- The section on Gao Mobo was added on 30th November - see here. So according to your own logic that should be removed as well. John Smith's (talk) 01:46, 10 January 2010 (UTC)
- I see that Gao was there before, though, and not sure why it was taken out. Also, I noticed that several editors allowed that to stay in, not to mention the one who put it back on Nov. 30th, with editor Rjanag, keeping it, consolidating it, and editor Colipon opposing your removal of it. With me and the other IP editors, that makes a pretty strong agreement to keep it--(I count 5 again 1).I removed the other addition since i did not see that there before. I think the part by Prof. Gao is a strong criticism, and therefore we should keep the strongest parts, no?76.14.42.191 (talk) 01:57, 10 January 2010 (UTC)
- You can read the archives for the exact reasons, but it was removed. It also was not reinserted. And just because someone did not remove it immediately does not mean they wanted to have it in. You cannot use silence to mean someone wants something. But in any case, voting does not equal consensus. It is gained through page stability. It remains a fact that the Gao Mobo spiel never gained consensus as part of the page. If you want to discuss its inclusion towards getting consensus, that's fine. But it is wrong to put it in and then demand we get consensus given that might take some time to do. John Smith's (talk) 02:20, 10 January 2010 (UTC)
- But consensus can't mean that everyone had to agree 100% either, right? If 5 or 6 editors agree with something and you are the only one who doesnt agree with it, and you can't convince others with a good argument, then is it right to say it can't be included because you don't also agree, ultimately with the change? I think in such a situation, you have to agree that consensus means most editors want something, not everyone 100%. Ultimately, I think it comes down more to the arguments being made then the numbers game, though.76.14.42.191 (talk) 08:55, 10 January 2010 (UTC)
- You can read the archives for the exact reasons, but it was removed. It also was not reinserted. And just because someone did not remove it immediately does not mean they wanted to have it in. You cannot use silence to mean someone wants something. But in any case, voting does not equal consensus. It is gained through page stability. It remains a fact that the Gao Mobo spiel never gained consensus as part of the page. If you want to discuss its inclusion towards getting consensus, that's fine. But it is wrong to put it in and then demand we get consensus given that might take some time to do. John Smith's (talk) 02:20, 10 January 2010 (UTC)
- I see that Gao was there before, though, and not sure why it was taken out. Also, I noticed that several editors allowed that to stay in, not to mention the one who put it back on Nov. 30th, with editor Rjanag, keeping it, consolidating it, and editor Colipon opposing your removal of it. With me and the other IP editors, that makes a pretty strong agreement to keep it--(I count 5 again 1).I removed the other addition since i did not see that there before. I think the part by Prof. Gao is a strong criticism, and therefore we should keep the strongest parts, no?76.14.42.191 (talk) 01:57, 10 January 2010 (UTC)
- The section on Gao Mobo was added on 30th November - see here. So according to your own logic that should be removed as well. John Smith's (talk) 01:46, 10 January 2010 (UTC)
You still haven't answered my question about what Rjiang said about making changes without getting consensus here. John Smith's (talk) 23:31, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
- I agree. Lets have consensus first before taking out what was already there, below, and which was taken out by yourself without getting that consensus. So are we in agreement and that won't be taken out again without consensus this time? Its restored now. The other minor changes don't seem to be in dispute, but lets talk about that here before anything else. I don't think a sandbox is necessary since we are not talking about a complete re-write, but if so, yes, lets use the sandbox for that purpose.76.14.42.191 (talk) 00:57, 10 January 2010 (UTC)
- For the last time, the changes you and the other IP editor have made are the new, significant changes Rjiang was talking about. I didn't remove anything that had been in the page for a long time and part of consensus. So it should go back to his last edit and we can work from there.
- A sandbox is more preferable because it avoids accusations of edit warring. John Smith's (talk) 01:21, 10 January 2010 (UTC)
- I gave it a rough count:Under Praise:24 lines, and under Criticism:50 lines, it is time to reduce it's size, before it gets bigger. Arilang 01:59, 10 January 2010 (UTC)
- Yes, that is about the correct weight for pro/con for this book, although I do think it can be trimmed further. My main issue was not to give the false impression of parity between critics and praise. I suppose we can state that, but its best to allow the strongest voices to be the ones presented, or make more clearly the division between the initial popular press and the later specialists who poured in on mass critical of this "history." For me this is more about being accurate as it is about being pretty.76.14.42.191 (talk) 02:05, 10 January 2010 (UTC)
- "The correct weight for the pro/con" for this book is subjective. We cannot and should not try to enter a numbers game about pro/con views. We should keep it simple. John Smith's (talk) 02:22, 10 January 2010 (UTC)
- Yes, that is about the correct weight for pro/con for this book, although I do think it can be trimmed further. My main issue was not to give the false impression of parity between critics and praise. I suppose we can state that, but its best to allow the strongest voices to be the ones presented, or make more clearly the division between the initial popular press and the later specialists who poured in on mass critical of this "history." For me this is more about being accurate as it is about being pretty.76.14.42.191 (talk) 02:05, 10 January 2010 (UTC)
- I gave it a rough count:Under Praise:24 lines, and under Criticism:50 lines, it is time to reduce it's size, before it gets bigger. Arilang 01:59, 10 January 2010 (UTC)
- For the record, I support the current version and support an expanded section that shows the critical reviews as being the predominant reaction of this book from the academic community. Its not subject, its really the reality.98.207.245.65 (talk) 03:51, 10 January 2010 (UTC)
- Thanks. It just occurred to me that there is no reason to limit information on wikipedia, since as I read somewhere on one of the policy pages, WP is not paper. However, articles should be kept to a recommended size, and if a section is deemed as getting too big, then there is still no reason to not report on that info. What I mean is that, if it gets too big we can simply export the section to its own daughter article that the main article links, to, i.e. "critical reception and debate." This means we keep the section small, with listing only the best reviews that capture best the points of criticism and praise, while linking to the daughter article that can take up a whole article to exhaust the full extend of the source and discussion around this controversial book. Anyway, just an idea I had reading WP boards. Wondering what people might think of this idea?I generally like more info than less, and this would cure my not liking to delete info.76.14.42.191 (talk) 06:54, 10 January 2010 (UTC)
Authors' response to criticism
Colipon blanked this section for what I take to be a dubious reason (I restored it). It isn't tit-for-tat, it goes to show that they were at least aware of the criticisms made and weren't completely ignoring them. One of the criticisms made was that they had not bothered to say anything in response.
Moreover the response to Nathan's article was substantial - it is only that their response has not been repeated here in any detail. Maybe the points made in their letter should be at least summarised in the article. John Smith's (talk) 14:59, 5 April 2010 (UTC)
- All it said was that they did ten years of research, and they are using that as an explanation for their conclusions. It's not a significant response. If the response to the Nathan article was significant, it should still be worked into the section about Nathan's article above, not have its standalone section. Colipon+(Talk) 15:04, 5 April 2010 (UTC)
- It's not a standalone section - it's a sub-section. And if the response to Nathan's article was added in (with detail) it to the criticism section it would make it even larger, something that should be avoided. The only way it could be merged if the entire "review" section was merged, which there does not appear to be a consensus to do. John Smith's (talk) 15:22, 5 April 2010 (UTC)
- Today, I spent some time to read the entire Nathan critique and the responses from Chang and Halliday, as well as the counter-response from Nathan. Chang and Halliday's rebuttal to Nathan was a mere contention of individual sources, none of which was substantial, as Nathan handily dismissed these rebuttals as mere red herrings that drew attention away from the real critique of the book - that it attempted to vilify Mao's intentions and personality and thus violates some basic biographical etiquette and ethics - to which Chang and Halliday had no response, except for that lone quote in The Observer, saying that they did ten years of research, as though this justifies their conclusions. I also read in detail The Observer article that John Smith's provides as the source for Chang and Halliday's "rebuttal". The article in The Observer makes it clear that the book is only "praised" by book reviews of major North American and British newspapers, none of these reviewers are China specialists, and mentions that China specialists have quite uniformly berated the book for its selective use of sources and questionable (and often wrong) conclusions. Several extremely problematic sections are noted consistently by China scholars. All of this gives me the impression that the presentation of these critiques, in particular the introduction, is not only having serious problems of WP:UNDUE, but in general paints an utterly misleading picture of how the book has been received by critics. I also find it troubling that my edits on this article have almost always been reverted on the spot by one user. Colipon+(Talk) 22:20, 6 April 2010 (UTC)
- That's your opinion regarding the rebuttal. The fact is that one was made and it's worth mentioning. I may look into expanding it so that it's a little more interesting to the reader.
- The Observer article is wrong as you have referred to it, and if you understood the topic you'd know why. There are a number of academics who have praised the book, not just journalists, some of whom are China "specialists". That they appeared in newspapers is quite irrelevant in suggesting they are somehow not valid.
- If you have something to say about me, please say it directly rather than skirt around the issue - I have a name, and it's rude of you not to use it. John Smith's (talk) 07:45, 8 April 2010 (UTC)
- I don't doubt that some academics have praised the book. Please give me these sources. Colipon+(Talk) 18:09, 8 April 2010 (UTC)
- Are you honestly saying that you can't see a single academic praise the book in this article as it stands? John Smith's (talk) 20:15, 8 April 2010 (UTC)
- Not at all. If you read my last message carefully, I said that I never doubted that there are academic sources that give the book praise (but they are of the minority, and they usually praise the style of the book and doesn't offer substantive reasoning to support the book's conclusions). I am also saying that I want to read these sources in detail to see if there is another side to the story. So far everything I have read from China specialists have criticized the book. I want to read the other side, and since you are involved in this article, perhaps you can give me sources on where to consult this 'other side'. Colipon+(Talk) 22:02, 8 April 2010 (UTC)
- I know what you said. You said "please give me these sources" . I was asking whether you were saying that you couldn't see a single academic praise the book "in this article" - i.e. the one we have been editing. Such sources are already there in the praise section. I could understand if you were unsure about commentators with any titles, but if you're looking for academics try starting by looking for people with academic titles. John Smith's (talk) 22:50, 8 April 2010 (UTC)
(←) With all due respect, the only two people who can remotely be called "China specialists" in the article who actually "praised" the book are Perry Link, and Stuart Schram. Schram actually did not praise the book much at all - merely saying that in some aspects, it increased our understanding of Mao (Nathan also mentions this). Link, on the other hand, is a professor of Chinese literature, not history, politics, or Mao. If these are the only two academic-china-specialist sources that claims to have been 'praising' this book, then my earlier point couldn't be clearer - that China specialists and China historians almost uniformly criticized the book. Colipon+(Talk) 23:05, 8 April 2010 (UTC)
- You didn't ask for "China specialists", you asked for academics. There's a difference between the two. And in any case you seemed to know what to find, so why play a game and ask me to provide you with a list?
- Schram does praise the book. Nathan had more criticisms to make nd only expressed a belief that the book could be valuable. Furthermore, why isn't Baum a "China specialist"? He's written books on Mao and the Cultural Revolution. He's also part of UCLA's Center for Chinese Studies. Also if people like Goodman, Bernstein (focus on politics) is a "China specialist" then I think Michael Yahuda's opinion is at least notable.
- Lastly and most importantly, how does being a "China specialist" make you better able to consider the book than a historian who does not focus on China? If some of the greatest weaknesses of the book are historiographical, any historian should be able to spot them. Indeed, does someone who specialises in politics like Goodman have that historical grounding that would be useful? Not suggesting he doesn't, just wondering. John Smith's (talk) 10:45, 10 April 2010 (UTC)
Who said what? So what!
OK, user Colipon, PCPP, and friends keep on reminding us, like hey, all these "China Specialists" and China historians are saying this book is crap, rubbish, not worth 5 cents. I would say:"So What!", when the most powerful propaganda machine of the world Propaganda Department of the Communist Party of China had chosen to keep quiet on this topic. Years had passed by since the book's release at 2005, and CCP had not even issued a single statement condemning the book, or the authors. Mao is still regard as some kind of "God" in China, and "Creator" of PRC, the Hero of the Chinese revolution. Now if we believe in what Colipon's "China Specialists" are telling us, that this book is full of craps, is all fabrication and cheats and lies, then why did the all powerful Propaganda Department of the Communist Party of China remain in silence, keep quiet, when the beloved revolutionary leader is being littered? Isn't it a bit strange? My question is, do Colipon's "China Specialists" know more about CCP's history than CCP itself? Arilang 01:27, 9 April 2010 (UTC)
- 1) Your points are not related to the article at all. 2) They are just your circumstantial speculation. 3) The propaganda department never releases anything about books published by foreign authors. 4) Mao is not a "God" in China; you get jailed if you uphold Maoist policies. Colipon+(Talk) 13:26, 9 April 2010 (UTC)
Further revisions to the article
I have largely reverted the edits made by Mightnightblueowl. Whilst they are clearly good faith, they are problematic for a number of reasons. I will try to explain my reasoning below in sequence.
- I think it's easier to describe Mao as a Communist than a Marxist as the former is a more general term. Marxist is more specific. In what ways was he a Marxist but not a Communist?
- Is it really POV to describe the Cultural Revolution as chaotic? I would argue that it's POV to deliberately try to remove any references to the violence/chaos that happened.
- I don't think that we can say "with historians arguing that Chang and Halliday misrepresented evidence" in the lead section, as some historians didn't say that. The lead as was currently written was fine.
- The quote from Gao is not prudent. He is not some sort of world-renowed expert who should be singled out for quoting. More importantly their 70 million total, whilst high, is not wildly wrong. Stuart Schram pointed out that most estimates are between 40 and 70 million. So why is Gao so write to criticise the numbers that he must be singled out not just to be quoted but in such a distinctive box?
- Gwynne Dyer is not "another journalist". He is, for example, a historian too.
- The image of "Was Mao really a monster" isn't suitable here. Cover images should only be used on articles concerning the publication in question.
- This article isn't about feedback on the book, it's about the book overall. We don't need even more discussion of why the book was good/bad.
I'm not suggesting anyone responds point-by-point, I was just trying to set out my initial reasoning in a clear way.
I have kept the reference to Gao's comments, but tried to incorporate them with the other criticism. It may be an idea to have a look at the praise/criticism section and see if we can summarise it a bit better. It shouldn't be a collection of everyone who has ever written a comment about the book. John Smith's (talk) 15:45, 6 January 2011 (UTC)
- Right, well, as the editor who was responsible for the changes (most of which I still stand by), I will try to explain myself, and then we can go on to discuss and what not... I hope that sounds okay to everyone. Firstly, the choice of "Marxist" over "Communist/communist". Although many western historians tend to use the term "Communist" to refer to all Marxists, describing Mao as a Marxist is a far more accurate description. He was after all trying to implement socialism in the PRC, believing that communism was something that could be achieved in the future; in this manner he was a socialist as well as a communist. This belief in the progress from capitalism to socialism to communism is at the core of the political aspects of Marxism. Mao's ideology and worldview, in essence, was that of Marxism, and socialism and communism were merely parts of that. Referring to him as a Communist is not wrong per se, just, I would argue, "less accurate". Secondly, I think "chaotic" is a very subjective term that means different things to different people. Yes the Cultural Revolution was in many parts violent, but violence is not necessarily chaotic, and chaos is not necessarily violent. It is a fiddly word that can imply many things, and as such is not, in my opinion, fit for an encyclopaedia. I also believe that in highlighting that Jung Chang lived through the "chaos" of the Cultural Revolution, we are implying a slight POV opinion attitude that is detrimental to the Revolution. Perhaps I am only splitting hairs here. To answer your third point, I think it needs to be made clear in the lead that the majority of academics focusing on the study of China have denounced The Unknown Story as rubbish; a few, particularly those who are not specialists in China, have not. This needs, I think, to be clarified. Skipping the fourth, fifth and sixth points (where I think you make a fair argument and I would have to concur), we then come to the seventh point. This is where I really have some difficulties in why you deleted my information.
- The majority of readers coming here won't be familiar with this particular area of Chinese history, and upon reading the Praise and Criticism sections will come to the conclusion that "oh, some historians think it'’s good, some think it is bad". The fact is, at least two academic anthologies have been published that go into some depth dealing with the core problems with The Unknown Story (Was Mao Really a Monster? and the Jan 06 issue of The China Joural) and Mobo Gao has devoted a whole chapter to its issues in his book The Battle for China's Past, and they have laid out solid critical flaws in most aspects of the work. I really don't think it's any good simply giving a list of quotes from critics if we do not present those very critics' arguments as to why The Unknown Story is such a flawed piece of history. Readers should understand why historians have criticised it, not just the fact that they have.(Midnightblueowl (talk) 17:02, 6 January 2011 (UTC))
The Battle for China's Past by Mobo Gao, http://www.confucius.adelaide.edu.au/people/mobogao.html On Confucius Institute Adelaide U website, Mobo Gao is the director of Confucius Institute Adelaide.
During an inspection of the Hanban late last month, Li Changchun, one of the nine members of the Standing Committee of the Politburo in charge of ideology and propaganda, stressed that the construction of Confucius Institutes "is an important channel to glorify Chinese culture, to help Chinese culture spread to the world", which is "part of China's foreign propaganda strategy".http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/IE24Ad02.html
- Well even Mao's article describes him as a communist. Given communist is more widely understood than Marxist I think it would be appropriate to use the current term.
- If you don't like "chaos" we could use a different word like "violence" or summarise it a bit more like "violent destruction of traditional Chinese society". Feel free to make some suggestions here. I don't understand your point about being "detrimental to the Revolution".
- I have made this point before, but you were not here to see it. What is a "specialist" and how does one gain recognition as such? Is there an international committee that hands out certificates? Moreover, why does being a "specialist" in something to do with China mean your opinion automatically counts more than someone who works in other fields? For example, a university lecturer could be a "China specialist" by studying Ancient Chinese history or modern Chinese politics - what does that have to do with Mao Zedong? I think that you may have fallen into the trap that I've seen other people do, which is to associate work with China to mean someone's opinion is more valid than someone who doesn't focus on China.
- Sure, if the only people who had good things to say about this book were hacks and lecturers in agriculture (for sake of argument), you might have a point. But we're talking about people who have written historical works themselves. This means that they (should) understand History and should be able to criticise a book that fails to conform to minimum standards. After all very little of the criticism is "Chang and Halliday say X, but actually historical document A proves Y happened". It's more about universal standards that apply to any historical work. Then there are those who have worked in fields concerning China - such as Richard Baum, Stuart Schram and Perry Link. We can't make a universal declaration because it's not clear-cut. The current statement that Academic reviews from China specialists were, on the whole, far more critical goes as far as I think it can. Otherwise we have to start making an assessment as to how the feedback should be assessed, which we can't as it's original research and far too subjective.
- We don't use the terms "some ..... and others". If people want to think that, they can. But as I said above we can't make readers' minds up for them. They can read the reviews and decide for themselves. The fact that there has been some serious work in trying to pull apart the book does not mean that it is bad, because it's always easier to criticise than praise. When was the last time you ever saw an academic write part of a book in support of a historical work like this?
- This article is about the book, not feedback on it. It is already heavily weighted in favour of discussing the reaction to it, and any further discussion would unbalance the article even more. John Smith's (talk) 18:48, 6 January 2011 (UTC)
- Thank you for replying John Smith’s. Regarding the terms “chaos” and what not, why do we not simply put that she lived in China up until whatever date it was, and therefore lived through the Cultural Revolution ? There is no real need to use terms like “chaos” or “violence” at all in this particular instance, other than to colour the language a little bit, which is simply unnecessary. Your point about specialists is taken, and I don’t see any purpose to debating this particular issue further. I would still argue however that the section on criticism should be structured so as to actually explain what the specific criticisms are i.e. poor use of sourcing etc. One must remember that this is probably one of the two most controversial books of history written in the twenty-first century (the only other that I can think of that has seen such controversy has been Schlomo Sand's The Invention of the Jewish People), and as such criticism of it plays a big part in the reason why it is notable (as far as I am aware, no other biographies of Mao have their own Misplaced Pages pages, nor do they probably warrant them). I am biased in my opinions of my book, because I believe it to be intrinsically bad history (but good propaganda), and I would never deny this, but I am still committed to the production of a Non-POV article. As such I am also committed to fleshing out the synopsis section as well.(Midnightblueowl (talk) 19:47, 6 January 2011 (UTC))
- At the very least it needs to be clear that she lived through the Cultural Revolution. That it's implied wouldn't be enough. Maybe "turmoil" would work. A little bit of colour never hurt. I don't know why you added a date to Wild Swans, it's linked.
- Thank you for replying John Smith’s. Regarding the terms “chaos” and what not, why do we not simply put that she lived in China up until whatever date it was, and therefore lived through the Cultural Revolution ? There is no real need to use terms like “chaos” or “violence” at all in this particular instance, other than to colour the language a little bit, which is simply unnecessary. Your point about specialists is taken, and I don’t see any purpose to debating this particular issue further. I would still argue however that the section on criticism should be structured so as to actually explain what the specific criticisms are i.e. poor use of sourcing etc. One must remember that this is probably one of the two most controversial books of history written in the twenty-first century (the only other that I can think of that has seen such controversy has been Schlomo Sand's The Invention of the Jewish People), and as such criticism of it plays a big part in the reason why it is notable (as far as I am aware, no other biographies of Mao have their own Misplaced Pages pages, nor do they probably warrant them). I am biased in my opinions of my book, because I believe it to be intrinsically bad history (but good propaganda), and I would never deny this, but I am still committed to the production of a Non-POV article. As such I am also committed to fleshing out the synopsis section as well.(Midnightblueowl (talk) 19:47, 6 January 2011 (UTC))
- User Midnightblueowl:"as far as I am aware, no other biographies of Mao have their own Misplaced Pages pages, nor do they probably warrant them)" This statement is wrong: What about The Private Life of Chairman Mao, and Red Star Over China? Arilang 01:39, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
- I'm rather surprised by your comment on controversial books and that this ranks at the top. We could discuss any number of autobiographies by politicians like Tony Blair, George Bush Junior, Sarah Palin, etc. But even moving away from those sorts of books, haven't you read any of the feedback on Gavin Menzies' works? Now there is someone who really has not received any support from credible individuals. In contrast this book has been praised by people with standing to comment. And in terms of notoriety, it's not the criticism but the author who gave the book a profile. Jung Chang is one of the best known of all writers on China in Europe and North America. Her critics, and I mean this without malice, are nobodies. If they had not said a word about the book it would have had just as great a profile as it currently does/did immediately after release.
- Everyone's biased in their own way, but I hope you're not going to let that affect what you write here. John Smith's (talk) 23:33, 6 January 2011 (UTC)
- The critics aren't "nobodies", they're professors who study China for a living. True, journalists have more attention nowadays, but that doesn't mean we should single out professors. It's the fact that the book had a great profile that it received critics. I'm sure there's plenty of books out there with tons of erroneous information. But no one knows about them so professors were never pissed off by it. And believe me, this book has plenty for academics to be angry about. Gnip (talk) 14:47, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
- I don't think you understand the point I was trying to make. They are nobodies in as far that hardly anyone has heard of them. That doesn't mean their views are worthless. My point was that their criticism in no way made the book higher profile than it was before they gave their feedback. John Smith's (talk) 21:03, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
- I thought we were talking about whether this book was "controversial", which it was in the context of the academic world, though maybe not for the average lay reader. Professors can be very famous in the academic world, and if we put in the commentaries of the media world, then I don't see why we shouldn't involve the academic one. Gnip (talk) 15:23, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
- No, the discussion (from what I could see) was about notoriety and why it had a high profile. There are already academic reviews (good and bad). John Smith's (talk) 10:12, 9 January 2011 (UTC)
- If you read my first statement, you would realize I was saying that the reason that the book had so many negative academic reviews was BECAUSE of its high profile. It was in response to your critique about how the academic reviews did not promote the popularity of the book. My point was that just b/c it didn't promote the book's popularity does not equate with leaving out the critiques, especially when the vast majority of academics that actually specialize in the area(Chinese history, Chinese politics) are negative, contrasting with media reviews(funnily enough, that's actually one of the critiques about the book. She draws from many sources who would probably have no clue about the subject matter). I don't see any wiki requirement in which we could only put out critiques that somehow promoted the books' popularity. Most critiques are there b/c so-and-so book was popular in the first place. There are precious few critiques that contributed to a book's popularity before said book became popular. Do you really expect notable professors to give criticisms about books before said book achieved popularity? By definition of having a "high profile", I doubt the academic world would even know about such a book. On the other hand, did most of the positive reviews help give it a high profile? Probably not, as well. If you know the author you'd probably realize the book achieved popularity from her previous book(Wild Swans, very well written, btw). So lets be fair about this. But let's say that you are right: that a book is not "controversial" if all criticisms of said book did not help give it a high profile. This still doesn't mean that the critiques of this particular book should be discarded. I suggest you look up "Was Mao Really a Monster", which certainly helped the book's popularity. It's a book containing about a dozen academic reviews targeting Mao: The Unknown Story. Basically, Chang received an entire book filled with academic reviews dedicated to criticizing her non-fiction as fiction. I'd say that's pretty important. Gnip (talk) 13:08, 8 January 2011 (UTC).
- I'm in agreement with Gnip here, and I think it vitally important that this article explains why the book was criticised rather than (as it currently stands), just throwing in a selection of critical quotes.(Midnightblueowl (talk) 21:04, 14 January 2011 (UTC))
- Well, I wouldn't go that far. I was arguing that the page should be kept as it is, with opinions that both praise and criticize the book. The quotes from the criticism section explains the "why" well enough. Adding more would just be reiterating what has been already said. Gnip (talk) 16:40, 19 January 2011 (UTC).
- I'm in agreement with Gnip here, and I think it vitally important that this article explains why the book was criticised rather than (as it currently stands), just throwing in a selection of critical quotes.(Midnightblueowl (talk) 21:04, 14 January 2011 (UTC))
- If you read my first statement, you would realize I was saying that the reason that the book had so many negative academic reviews was BECAUSE of its high profile. It was in response to your critique about how the academic reviews did not promote the popularity of the book. My point was that just b/c it didn't promote the book's popularity does not equate with leaving out the critiques, especially when the vast majority of academics that actually specialize in the area(Chinese history, Chinese politics) are negative, contrasting with media reviews(funnily enough, that's actually one of the critiques about the book. She draws from many sources who would probably have no clue about the subject matter). I don't see any wiki requirement in which we could only put out critiques that somehow promoted the books' popularity. Most critiques are there b/c so-and-so book was popular in the first place. There are precious few critiques that contributed to a book's popularity before said book became popular. Do you really expect notable professors to give criticisms about books before said book achieved popularity? By definition of having a "high profile", I doubt the academic world would even know about such a book. On the other hand, did most of the positive reviews help give it a high profile? Probably not, as well. If you know the author you'd probably realize the book achieved popularity from her previous book(Wild Swans, very well written, btw). So lets be fair about this. But let's say that you are right: that a book is not "controversial" if all criticisms of said book did not help give it a high profile. This still doesn't mean that the critiques of this particular book should be discarded. I suggest you look up "Was Mao Really a Monster", which certainly helped the book's popularity. It's a book containing about a dozen academic reviews targeting Mao: The Unknown Story. Basically, Chang received an entire book filled with academic reviews dedicated to criticizing her non-fiction as fiction. I'd say that's pretty important. Gnip (talk) 13:08, 8 January 2011 (UTC).
- No, the discussion (from what I could see) was about notoriety and why it had a high profile. There are already academic reviews (good and bad). John Smith's (talk) 10:12, 9 January 2011 (UTC)
- I thought we were talking about whether this book was "controversial", which it was in the context of the academic world, though maybe not for the average lay reader. Professors can be very famous in the academic world, and if we put in the commentaries of the media world, then I don't see why we shouldn't involve the academic one. Gnip (talk) 15:23, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
- I don't think you understand the point I was trying to make. They are nobodies in as far that hardly anyone has heard of them. That doesn't mean their views are worthless. My point was that their criticism in no way made the book higher profile than it was before they gave their feedback. John Smith's (talk) 21:03, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
- The critics aren't "nobodies", they're professors who study China for a living. True, journalists have more attention nowadays, but that doesn't mean we should single out professors. It's the fact that the book had a great profile that it received critics. I'm sure there's plenty of books out there with tons of erroneous information. But no one knows about them so professors were never pissed off by it. And believe me, this book has plenty for academics to be angry about. Gnip (talk) 14:47, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
- Wouldn't it be Original Research if wiki editors begin to explain "Why" this "Why" that? Arilang 23:47, 19 January 2011 (UTC)
- Not really. Original research is putting things in wikipedia that wasn't actually published. However, if you read the criticism section it shows that the "why" was actually published. Critics don't just say "it's bad" and move on. If so then they don't deserve a place in wikipedia. However, this is also why I am arguing to leave the criticism section as is. The quotes explain the "why" well enough. There's no need to add to them unless you are just itching to summarize.Gnip (talk) 18:00, 20 January 2011 (UTC).
- Wouldn't it be Original Research if wiki editors begin to explain "Why" this "Why" that? Arilang 23:47, 19 January 2011 (UTC)
- Gnip is on the right track here, though I would like to suggest a few corrections to his last statement. The reason the book received so much negative feedback from academics was not only because of its high profile, but it certainly did play a major role. Historians did definitely want to counter the widespread praise the book was receiving from journalists and other non-specialists, but it was also the book’s clear and obvious failings that drew a lot of attention from academics, who felt it was their responsibility to expose the book’s problematic research and unsubstantiated conclusions. Any work claiming to provide a comprehensive biography of one of the world's most famous (or infamous) leaders will get noticed, and will certainly be watched closely by academics specializing in China studies. As someone currently working within this very millieu, I can say that most specialists I know of have spoken to were at least aware of the book. Gnip is, however, correct that the published response to the book (such as the Benton volume, or the China Journal response) were unusual, as I have stated before in this article's discussion. I think this is the part that is getting lost on John Smith's, unfortunately. Though I may be splitting hairs rehashing Gnip's words, what I am trying to clarify is that people should not be under the impression that academics only noticed the book due it its huge publicity. It is not correct to say that without its ‘high profile’ “the academic world would about such a book.” Professional historians deal daily with the “low profile”, often reviewing books that never become very popular or well-known (ie. they don't sell very well outside of academia). In fact, they frequently research and dissect works that few outside of a very small circle of individuals will ever read. In this sense, academics are very insulated in what they do, and are often disconnected from the general public. That is not to say, however, that they are unaware of new publications outside of academia, particularly those re-evaluating major figures in history. Also, Benton’s volume “Was Mao Really a Monster” was not, in my opinion, a major contributor to the book’s popularity, as Gnip suggests. As you know, MTUS was first published in 2005, and this collection of reviews was only published in 2009, quite some time after the book had already become popular (and as you know, the reviews found in the volume had been previously published elsewhere). What is important about this recent volume is not how it contributed to the book’s popularity, in my opinion, but rather as a reflection of how distressed the academic community truly is by the MTUS’s continued popularity. This last fact is what I am concerned does not quite get across in the article, as it stands. Unfortunately, I’m not sure how to appropriately correct that issue. I think that is what Midnightblueowl has been trying to address, and what I myself tried to do some time ago. Milamber (talk) 00:34, 25 January 2011 (UTC)
- I don't know, Milamber. I've known a number of less popular books without much critical review. Take the "Scarlet Memorial", for example. I have not found many academic critiques about the book, but I did find some positive reviews about how the book reveals that Chinese communists support cannibalism. Such a controversial book must have at least SOME negative reviews from the academia if it were more popular enough. Of course, perhaps you know many less popular works that were critically reviewed by the academia. I admit I'm not as well read as I let off :). Gnip (talk) 12:14, 28 January 2011 (UTC)
- Gnip is on the right track here, though I would like to suggest a few corrections to his last statement. The reason the book received so much negative feedback from academics was not only because of its high profile, but it certainly did play a major role. Historians did definitely want to counter the widespread praise the book was receiving from journalists and other non-specialists, but it was also the book’s clear and obvious failings that drew a lot of attention from academics, who felt it was their responsibility to expose the book’s problematic research and unsubstantiated conclusions. Any work claiming to provide a comprehensive biography of one of the world's most famous (or infamous) leaders will get noticed, and will certainly be watched closely by academics specializing in China studies. As someone currently working within this very millieu, I can say that most specialists I know of have spoken to were at least aware of the book. Gnip is, however, correct that the published response to the book (such as the Benton volume, or the China Journal response) were unusual, as I have stated before in this article's discussion. I think this is the part that is getting lost on John Smith's, unfortunately. Though I may be splitting hairs rehashing Gnip's words, what I am trying to clarify is that people should not be under the impression that academics only noticed the book due it its huge publicity. It is not correct to say that without its ‘high profile’ “the academic world would about such a book.” Professional historians deal daily with the “low profile”, often reviewing books that never become very popular or well-known (ie. they don't sell very well outside of academia). In fact, they frequently research and dissect works that few outside of a very small circle of individuals will ever read. In this sense, academics are very insulated in what they do, and are often disconnected from the general public. That is not to say, however, that they are unaware of new publications outside of academia, particularly those re-evaluating major figures in history. Also, Benton’s volume “Was Mao Really a Monster” was not, in my opinion, a major contributor to the book’s popularity, as Gnip suggests. As you know, MTUS was first published in 2005, and this collection of reviews was only published in 2009, quite some time after the book had already become popular (and as you know, the reviews found in the volume had been previously published elsewhere). What is important about this recent volume is not how it contributed to the book’s popularity, in my opinion, but rather as a reflection of how distressed the academic community truly is by the MTUS’s continued popularity. This last fact is what I am concerned does not quite get across in the article, as it stands. Unfortunately, I’m not sure how to appropriately correct that issue. I think that is what Midnightblueowl has been trying to address, and what I myself tried to do some time ago. Milamber (talk) 00:34, 25 January 2011 (UTC)
- As an addition to what I have previously said, I would note that the main areas that critics highlight are: 1) Chang and Halliday's erroneous usage of sources, ranging from the schewed interviews that they performed to the misquoting of formerly published information, 2) the extremely biased polemical nature of their work, 3) the (possibly intentional) misleading use of their referencing system and other bizarre formatting ideas (such as merging the Pinyin and Wade Giles forms of English translations), 4) the outright falsification of events, and 5) the self-contradictory statements and logical inconsistency. I believe that, using the wealth of criticism of the work by a wide range of experts in the field of Chinese history, we can present concise paragraphs explaining each and every one of these criticisms in this article. It is my firm belief that this will improve the article dramatically, making it far more readable and understandable to the average reader. Of course, this must go hand in hand with the greater referencing and fleshing out of the rest of the work, namely the synopsis section, which could really do with more quotes from The Unknown Story itself.(Midnightblueowl (talk) 18:30, 6 January 2011 (UTC))
- It would be much better to edit the article first in ways that we can easily agree upon, such as expanding the synopsis section as you suggest. We can worry about the more disputed areas later. John Smith's (talk) 00:42, 6 February 2011 (UTC)
Chinese New Left
Midnightblueowl, are you pushing Chinese New Left POV here in wikipedia? Looking at talkpages of Cultural Revolution, Great Leap Forward, and here, there seems to have some sort of pattern. http://www.wyzxsx.com/ 乌有之乡 would be a good place for your contributions. Arilang 07:38, 6 February 2011 (UTC) Not everyone shares your monomaniacal and ideologically-driven determination to falsify Chinese history; no surprise that disagreeing with you becomes occasion for a political witch-hunt. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 123.115.182.189 (talk) 15:13, 13 September 2011 (UTC)
Scarlet Memorial
Scarlet Memorial: Tales Of Cannibalism In Modern China is also a very interesting book, would user Midnightblueowl, Gnip, Milamber, John Smith's and others care to help to build up the content a bit? Arilang 05:02, 30 January 2011 (UTC)
- What other academic books reference it, and are there any significant academic reviews of it, like there are for The Unknown Story or The Private Life of Chairman Mao ? I have never heard of any, but then that does of course not mean that they do not exist. If it fails in these then, interesting or not, it may well warrant deletion I'm afraid. (Midnightblueowl (talk) 23:29, 4 February 2011 (UTC))
This is a good one:http://taiwanreview.nat.gov.tw/fp.asp?xItem=1441&CtNode=128
Alice W. Cheang, is an assistant professor of classical and modern Chinese in the Department of East Asian Languages and Literatures at the University of Notre Dame. Arilang 10:53, 5 February 2011 (UTC)
Mobo Gao references to be removed
Michael Rank:
"But Gao's attacks on Chang are sometimes uncomfortably personal, while his defence of the cultural revolution failed to convince me." The revolution, revised by Michael Rank at guardian.co.uk
Gregor Benton:
""A powerful mixture of political passion and original research, a brave polemic against the fashionable view on China. ... Aims a knockout blow at Jung Chang's recent book on Mao, which Bush and the conservatives rave-reviewed." Gregor Benton, Professor of Chinese History, University of Cardiff.
The above two reviewers would about sum up the Western mainstream academic view point on Gao. I have spend hours doing Google search on Gao's book, hoping to discover some "positive" reviews, unfortunately, I failed. Looks like The Battle for China's Past: Mao & the Cultural Revolution has been more or less ignored by the general academic world.
That said, first of all, Gao's references should be removed from this article, according to WP:Neutral point of view#Due and undue weight, and editors are welcomed to join this discussion to reach consensus. Arilang 08:16, 24 February 2011 (UTC)
I'm sorry to disagree with Arilang, who has done so much good work on this as on so many articles, but I would not favor removing Gao's references. My understanding is that NPOV doesn't apply to the authors being cited, only to us as editors. Otherwise we would also have to remove the favorable citations as well. A summary of the response needs to include the full range, whether or not we agree. Mobo Gao is a well established scholar. The fact that the book has been reviewed in prominent places shows that it was taken seriously. He is included in Gregor Benton's anthology Was Mao Really a Monster?. So giving him one sentence doesn't strike me as "undue weight." ch (talk)
Arilang, I think you need to refine the definition of a "positive review". Your quote by Michael Rank does not tell her entire opinion, but consists only of a half-truth. It's called selective quoting. Her review isn't positive, but it's not negative either. What you quoted from Gregor Benton is entirely positive. If Gregor thought negatively of Mobo Gao, he wouldn't have put him in his book. I also find it hard to believe that you spent "hours" trying to find a positive review and failing whereas I can find one in around 30 seconds. Besides, having one sentence by Mobo Gao in the critique section is hardly "undue weight". Furthermore, this sentence is not a "minority view" in the academia, so I'm afraid wiki rules doesn't apply to the point here. It's just one sentence, I say leave it as it is. User:Gnip (talk) 2:58 25 Febrary 2011(UTC)