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Mao's Little Red Book Goes West

David Aaronovitch asks why Chairman Mao's Little Red Book captured the imagination of the West in the 1960s and 70s? From 2016.

In 2016, to mark the 50th anniversary of the Cultural Revolution, David Aaronovitch explored the extraordinary story of how Chairman Mao鈥檚 Little Red Book captured the imagination of the West.

A collection of Mao鈥檚 quotations, packaged with a red vinyl cover, the book is an iconic piece of design and one of the world鈥檚 most widely distributed texts. In Britain, it was a massive hit. David hears from comedian and former Maoist Alexei Sayle who sold the book in Liverpool. Activist and former Labour councillor Linda Bellos admits that, while she carried the Little Red Book as a teenager, she didn鈥檛 really read it and was more interested in being trendy.

The Little Red Book was hugely fashionable in late 1960s and 70s Europe. The French filmmaker Jean-Luc Godard popularised it with his 1967 film La Chinoise, in which five pretty students plot revolutionary actions from their Paris flat before taking part in a bungled assassination attempt.

Bestselling author of Wild Swans, Jung Chang, argues that Little Red Book wavers in the West were completely ignorant when it came to the realities of life during the Cultural Revolution. She explains that in China the book was a weapon in a literal sense, used to beat those who were deemed to be 鈥渃lass enemies鈥.

Meanwhile, in America, the book found an unlikely audience among the Black Panther Party. Elaine Browne, a former Panther who lead the party in the early 70s, explains that the Panthers saw the Little Red Book as a blueprint for enacting the revolution they were hoping to bring about in the United States.

Presenter: David Aaronovitch

Producer: Max O'Brien

A Juniper production for 麻豆社 Radio 4, first broadcast in February 2016.

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30 minutes

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Tue 3 Dec 2024 10:30

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  • Fri 5 Feb 2016 11:00
  • Tue 3 Dec 2024 10:30
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