Moravia's informal, witty, rewardingly opinionated comments on his visit to China begin with the poverty, severe and...

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THE RED BOOK AND THE GREAT WALL

Moravia's informal, witty, rewardingly opinionated comments on his visit to China begin with the poverty, severe and egalitarian, ""proud and decent"": goes on to Mao, whom he contrasts with Stalin. He sees Maoism as a stabilizing, religious force, the Cultural Revolution as a quarrel over orthodoxies, inflamed by the ""romantic populism"" of the ""innocent, ignorant,"" Red Guards; and he fits the struggle quite plausibly into China's historic conservatism. His remarks on East-West differences (e.g. modes of violence) are fresh and sharp. The peculiarities of Maoist nationalism, the anomalies of class struggle on a cultural plane, the new ""hatred of the past"" are evaluated with a happy sense of alternative hypothesis. General readers will enjoy an eminently civilized novelist's reactions to a self-transforming civilization.

Pub Date: Sept. 17, 1968

ISBN: N/A

Page Count: -

Publisher: Farrar, Straus & Giroux

Review Posted Online: N/A

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 1968

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