Introduction; 1. Indictment; 2. Monsters; 3. Testimony; 4. Emotions; 5. Verdict; 6. Vanity; Conclusion; Index of Chinese terms; Bibliography; Index.
This book provides the first account of the most famous trial in Chinese history, and details the search for justice after Mao's Cultural Revolution.
Alexander C. Cook is Assistant Professor of Modern Chinese History at the University of California, Berkeley. Previously a Stanford Humanities Fellow and Fulbright Student, he holds a PhD with distinction in History from Columbia University, New York. His research focuses on the history of Maoism in its global and domestic contexts. He is editor of the volume Mao's Little Red Book: A Global History, and has contributed chapters to the volumes Law and History (2004), A Critical Introduction to Mao (Cambridge, 2010), and Scripting Revolution (2015), as well as the forthcoming volumes Political Trials and The Cambridge History of Communism, Volume 3.
'This book is an excellent exploration of the cultural politics of
post-Mao China as well as an important contribution to the study of
the global unfolding of legal modernity. Drawing on an
exceptionally wide-ranging archive, Cook analyzes the
contradictions between legality and humanity at a critical point in
China's transition.' Teemu Ruskola, Emory University, Atlanta
'Alexander C. Cook's new book, The Cultural Revolution on Trial, is
a significant contribution to the study of the historical trial of
Lin Biao and Jiang Qing's counterrevolutionary cliques … Cook
should be complimented for such a unique approach to studying the
trial. He demonstrates his broad knowledge not only of the trial
and the legal documents, but also of the literature of political
trials in general, as well as of contemporary Chinese literature.
The entire book is an intensive reading and Cook's discoveries are
profound.' Qiu Jin, The American Historical Review
'Alternating courtroom-based chapters on the trial with
knowledgeable snapshots of the culture of the post-Maoist
transformation, Cook conjures a realistic image of a conflicted
society undergoing far-reaching change … he carefully unpacks the
'linguistic and symbolic freight' of the Gang of Four trial
narratives and reveals their 'hidden contents'. By so doing, Cook
enables readers to see the most important trial in Chinese history
from different angles.' Jens Meierhenrich, The English Historical
Review
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