Here, we’re going to discuss the definition of “revolution.” It’s too easy to look at the CPC and think that’s what the revolution produced. No, there were other Chinese revolutions, and before we look at what THOSE were, we’ll look at what revolutions are.
Inspiration for this PodcastBefore I get away into my own program too much, I owe a debt of inspiration to the Revolutions podcast by Mike Duncan.
He's gotten various suggestions to cover Chinese content. I know—I sent him one myself. Then I thought, I could do that!
So here we are.
Follow the link or search for it on your favorite podcast app. (Tell him I sent you!)
Definition of RevolutionBasically:
Revolution is basically an opportunistic infection. It takes advantage of unusual weakness in a political system.
My definitions are yoinked directly from the Wikipedia article on revolution.
Definitions in this episode rely heavily on quotations in the Wikipedia article from the work of Jeff Goodwin. I quote him as "he's who Wikipedia quoted," but let's do him justice in the show notes.
For the show notes...
Political RevolutionRevolutions are planned. There's a smaller group of people organizing it. They follow a popular impulse. Most ordinary people don't have the capacity to plan, so it's this small group that drives things.
Social RevolutionWho's in charge changes, why they're in charge changes. Family, business, community—it all changes. Social revolution often accompanies political revolution.
Insights from The Dictator's HandbookWhen I prepared this episode, I used a summary from this website to get my notes straight. Thanks, Mr. Sustainability!
The Dictator's Handbook: Why Bad Behavior is Almost Always Good Politics by Bruce Bueno de Mesquita and Alastair Smith provides foundational insights into why China was so ... revolutionary from the early mid-1800s to 1949.
These are the rules that Chinese rulers couldn't somehow keep:
Rules of Political Power(Copied directly from Mr. Sustainability, just to be clear.)
So...
Why Chinese Revolutions Kept HappeningWays to remove an incumbent kept opening up until the Communist Party nailed things down.
Revolutions kept happening because there were problems the authorities:
Will Durant in The Story of Civilization: Our Oriental Heritage stated in reference to the founding of a Japanese dynasty that a founder uses up half the genius of a dynasty in founding it.
When we get to the CPC, it will be interesting to see what a succession-by-adoption opens up.
If You'd Like to Support the PodcastAlso...
Please reach out at chineserevolutions@gmail.com and let me know what you think!
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