Noun1.Cultural Revolution- a radical reform in China initiated by Mao Zedong in 1965 and carried out largely by the Red Guard; intended to eliminate counterrevolutionary elements in the government it resulted in purges of the intellectuals and socioeconomic chaos ...
Cultural Revolution: to replace his designated successors with leaders more faithful to his current thinking; to rectify the Chinese Communist Party; to provide China’s youths with a revolutionary experience; and to achieve some specific policy changes so as to make the educational, health care, ...
“impure” elements of Chinese society and revive the revolutionary spirit that had led to victory in the civil war 20 years earlier and the formation of the People’s Republic of China. The Cultural Revolution continued in various phases until Mao’s death in 1976, and its tormented and ...
In 1966 to 1976, China's Cultural Revolution led to major changes throughout the country under the direction of Chairman Mao Zedong, including extreme violence and death. Learn about the start of the Cultural Revolution and its legacy in this lesson. ...
Cultural Revolution Cultural rite culturalize culturally culturati culture culture area culture clash culture dish Culture features Culture fluid culture hero culture jamming culture medium Culture myth culture shock culture vulture cultured cultured pearl culture-free test Cultureless culturist cultus Cultus co...
but the dominant theme in the discussion remained the idea that Neanderthals went extinct in the Late Pleistocene, so they must have somehow been inferior to the AMH with which they cohabited Europe during the last glacial interval. The “out of Africa” and “human revolution” concepts drove...
The Cultural Revolution has had a long-lasting negative impact on Chinese HE, especially in terms of lost talent, scorn for knowledge, and a decline in the quality of HE (Deng, 2017). From 1978 to 2012: omens of strong cultural nationalism Between 1978 and 2012, China witnessed changes in...
Storey emphasises that popular culture emerges from the urbanisation of the industrial revolution, which identifies the term with the usual definitions of 'mass culture'. Studies of Shakespeare (by Weimann, Barber or Bristol, for example) locate much of the characteristic vitality of his drama in ...
(individual traditions) are not initially organized into systems and exhibitneither division of labor nor group-level adaptationsat the outset. On the same account, groups of traditions in social protocellsdo not exhibit MLS 2. The social protocell is by definition expected to exhibittemporal and ...
Modern Homo sapiens first appeared about 200,000 years ago; however, socio-cultural evolution only beganabout 10,000 years ago, when early hunter–gatherer societies began to change their simple forms of segmentary social differentiation during the so-called Neolithic revolution, which was mainly cau...