China Pictorial

China Pictorial

China Pictorial

More on China …..

China Pictorial

China Pictorial began on July 18, 1950, less than a year after the founding of the People’s Republic of China, and has continued publishing monthly ever since. The magazine has received much attention from Chinese leaders, and Chairman Mao Tse-tung himself wrote the name of the magazine for its masthead in his own calligraphy.

China Pictorial was a companion magazine to the other foreign language publications produced on a regular basis by the Socialist People’s Republic of China, China Reconstructs, Peking Review and Chinese Literature.

(Those issues with no link are copies which haven’t been available to scan. If anyone has these numbers and would be prepared to loan them to be scanned it would be very much appreciated. If the year is not listed then that means no issues at all have been available to scan to date.)

1951

1 – January     

  • The Great Leader of the Chinese People – Chairman Mao Tse-tung
  • Peace must be won
  • Chop off the claws of the aggressor
  • Tibetan life after Liberation
  • National minorities welcome the goodwill mission
  • The National Front against imperialism
  • 100th Anniversary of the Taiping Peasants’ Revolutionary Movement

2 – February 

3 – March 

4 – April      

  • China’s women emancipated
  • Liberating the border regions of China
  • Japan under American Imperialism
  • Harnessing the Huai River
  • China’s largest public library
  • The Minority Peoples of Southwest China

5 – May    

6 – June     

  • One year of the Korean War
  • The peaceful liberation of Tibet
  • The Chinese Young Pioneers
  • New mining methods produce new records
  • Forerunners of a Peoples’ Athletics

7 – July 

8 – August   

  • 24th Anniversary of the Chinese People’s Army
  • The Heroism of the Chinese People’s Volunteers – in Korea

9 – September    

  • American sabotage of Armistice Talks – in Korea
  • The Huai River Battle
  • Peasants repair ancient irrigation system
  • Students on summer vacation train for their future
  • The Long March – a new opera

10 – October    

  • China celebrates National Day
  • The Third World Youth Festival
  • Broadcasting to the people
  • The Summer Palace

11 – November   

  • Selected Works of Mao Tse-Tung
  • First Anniversary of Resist-America and Aid-Korea Movement
  • Government Delegation visits old Revolutionary Bases
  • From poverty to wealth in Inner Mongolia
  • Ancient Art in China
  • ‘How the steel was tempered’ – new theatre from Soviet novel

12 – December    

  • Achievements in railway construction
  • Textiles for the people
  • Workers’ safety improved
  • The wealth of South China
  • Fisheries of New China

1952

1 – January      

  • We are one with Chairman Mao
  • They visited Chairman Mao’s native village
  • Fertilisers – a growing industry
  • Science comes to agriculture
  • Early morning in the capital
  • Traditional Chinese medical practice undergoes reform

2 – February          

  • Spring Festival
  • Care for the families of the Nation’s Heroes
  • ‘Labour can change the face of the earth’
  • Workers’ initiative raises production
  • Liu Hu-lan

3 – March    

  • Celebration of the Second Anniversary of the Sino-Soviet Treaty of Friendship, Alliance and Mutual Assistance
  • American germ warfare in Korea and China
  • Happy marriages break through feudal ideas
  • The 29th Anniversary of the ‘February 7 Movement’
  • ‘Let’s fam together’
  • In the battle against illiteracy
  • Liu Lai-ti – a heroine of New China

4 – April  

5 – May  

6 – June  

7 – July  

8 – August 

9 – September  

10 – October  

11 – November  

12 – December  

1959

1 – January      

2 – February          

3 – March    

4 – April  

5 – May  

6 – June     

  • Joint statement of the Chinese and Japanese Communist Parties
  • Article by W. E. B. Du Bois on his recent trip to China
  • The Sino-German Friendship People’s Commune

7 – July  

8 – August 

9 – September  

10 – October  

11 – November  

12 – December  

1968

1 – January 

2 – February          

3 – March

4 – April  

5 – May  

6 – June     

7 – July 

  • Firmly support the Revolutionary Mass Movements arising in France, Europe and North America!
  • Men Ho – good cadre boundlessly loyal to Chairman Mao‘s Revolutionary Line
  • No limit to serving the people

8 – August 

  • The evergreen friendship between the Peoples of China and Tanzania
  • The Red Ninth Company, a model in studying Chairman Mao’s Works
  • Chairman Mao gave her a new life – medical advances enabled the removal of a huge tumour
  • Keeping close ties with the Masses
  • Revolutionary Flame in Africa

9 – September   

10 – October

  • The working class must exercise leadership in everything – Yao Wen-Yuan
  • The road for training engineering and technical personnel indictated by the Shanghai Machine Tools Plant – Report of an investigation
  • A Red Banner in valiantly defending Chairman Mao’s line on army building
  • New herdsmen on the Grasslands
  • Sink roots among the Masses

Suplement – Compass for the Victory of the Revolutionary People of All Countries

11 – November  

12 – December  

1969

1 – January    

  • Marching up the highway of the brilliant ‘May 7’ Directive
  • ‘Barefoot Doctors’ are fine!
  • Such intellectuals are welcomed by the Poor and Lower Middle Peasants
  • Workers mount the stage of designing
  • A Red Banner in water conservation construction
  • A fine example of continuously making Revolution under the Dictatorship of the Proletariat
  • A Heroic People’s Army – The Albanian People’s Army

Supplement: China succcessfuly conducts new hydrogen bomb test    

2 – February          

3 – March    

4 – April

  • Greet the Party’s Ninth National Congress with outstanding achievements!
  • A good example for Tientsin workers
  • Co-operative medical service is fine!
  • Nine poor peasant families run their own school for 19 years
  • To the vast countryside
  • New storm in the Japanese People’s Struggle

5 – May

  • Win new victories of the industrial front
  • The Chinese Government lodges strongest protest with the Soviet Government – over incursions in the area of Chenpao Island
  • Down with the New Tsars!
  • Chenpao Island has always been Chinese territory
  • A ‘PLA Tachai‘ marches ahead

6 – June

7 – July  

8 – August 

9 – September  

10 – October  

11 – November  

12 – December

  • Celebration of the 20th Anniversary of the Founding of the People’s Republic of China
  • Advance along the rod pointed out by the Kutien Conference

China Pictorial 1969 Index

Poster of Chairman MaoTse-tung

1970

1 – January

  • Revolutionary Emulation under Socialism
  • The bitter fight of the Hsiaohsiang People
  • Heroic Paratroopers
  • Peasant-College Student-Peasant
  • A fine school for the Re-education of Cadres
  • Forward on the road of integrating with the Workers and Peasants

Supplement: Grand Celebration of the 25th Anniversary of the Liberation of Albania

2 – February          

3 – March

4 – April  

5 – May  

6 – June     

7 – July  

8 – August 

9 – September   

10 – October  

11 – November  

12 – December  

1971

1 – January    

2 – February          

3 – March

  • Centenary of the Paris Commune (1871-1971)
  • Ten Years of Splendid Victories – Celebrating the 10th Anniversary of the Founding of the South Vietnam national Front for Liberation
  • Participate in production while studying
  • Educated young people in the countryside
  • Women bridge builders
  • A Heroic People – of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam

4 – April  

5 – May  

6 – June     

7 – July  

8 – August 

9 – September   

  • Taching – Red Banner on the industrial front
  • Women well operators
  • In industry, learn from Taching
  • On the Yellow Sea coast
  • The Korean People forge ahead
  • The Cambodian People are bound to win
  • The idea of serving the people
  • Bulward of continuing the Revolution

10 – October  

11 – November  

12 – December  

1972

1 – January    

2 – February  

  • Gala meeting of table tennis players from Asia and Africa
  • Delegation of the People’s Republic of China at United Nations
  • China’s 1971 Autumn Exports Commodities Fair
  • Militant Art, Revolutionary Friendship

3 – March    

4 – April  

5 – May   

  • Paean to Proletarian Internationalism – Modern Revolutionary Peking Opera ‘On the Docks’
  • Edgar Snow, friend of the Chinese People
  • New works of art
  • Cultural team on the plateau
  • PLA topographic unit on the ‘Roof of the world’
  • Profound frienship between Army and People
  • Serve the people better
  • Heroic Albania

Supplement: The Red Lantern Opera (Selected Songs)   

6 – June     

7 – July  

8 – August 

9 – September   

10 – October  

11 – November  

12 – December  

1973

1 – January    

2 – February          

3 – March    

4 – April  

5 – May  

6 – June      

  • Young steel workers trained
  • Work on the Yellow River must be done well
  • A tour of the source of the Yellow River
  • After the earthquake – in Tibet
  • Chinese acrobatic troups abroad
  • The PLA practices its traditional industry and thrift

Supplement: Samdech Sihanouk’s Inspection Tour of the Cambodian Liberated Zone

7 – July    

  • Celebrating ‘May First’, International Labour Day
  • Lunghai – a county of high yield in grain
  • How Hualin Brigade learnt from Tachai
  • New pictures of the ‘Great Northern Wilderness’
  • Changes in the Yellow River-Huangshui River Valley

8 – August 

9 – September   

10 – October  

11 – November  

12 – December  

1974

1 – January   

  • Secretary of State Kissinger in Peking
  • Azalea Mountain – a Modern Revolutionary Peking Opera
  • Young People in a mountain region
  • The ‘Roebuck’ – an advanced fishing Commune
  • Pearls on the Yellow River
  • The People’s Police
  • A survey of the Takla Makan Desert
  • A theatrical troup from the countryside

2 – February          

3 – March    

  • Record harvests in China
  • This factory relies on its workers
  • College students of a new type
  • Three noted Yellow River cities
  • Free of floods

4 – April  

5 – May  

6 – June      

7 – July   

  • New successes in Revolution and Production
  • We love Tien An Men
  • Shanghai’s history is created by the labouring masses
  • A prosperous Socialist rural scene
  • Jubilant North Tibet Grassland

8 – August 

9 – September   

10 – October  

11 – November  

12 – December  

1975

1 – January   

2 – February          

3 – March    

4 – April  

5 – May    

  • Peking’s market
  • Armymen and civilians
  • Working hard for Socialism
  • Urban militia of Shanghai
  • Changes along the Tatu
  • The Revolutionary Committee of our county

6 – June      

7 – July   

8 – August 

9 – September   

10 – October  

11 – November  

12 – December

1976

To date we only have access to one issue in English of China Pictorial for 1976. However, four numbers for the year are available in Chinese and are included here for non-Chinese speakers for the images.

1 – January   In Chinese

2 – February          

3 – March    

4 – April  In Chinese

5 – May   In Chinese

6 – June      

7 – July  In Chinese

8 – August 

9 – September   

10 – October  

11 – November

An issue entirely devoted to Chairman Mao but merely two months after his death the revisionist and ‘capitalist-roaders’ within the Party were already ‘re-writing’ history. The ’empty’ spaces in the picture on page 12, for example, are the erased comrades of the so-called ‘Gang of Four‘. However, this issue does contain many good picture of Comrade Mao.

  • Eternal Glory to the Great Leader and Great Teacher Mao Tse-tung  

12 – December

1977

1 – January

This number of China Pictorial was emtirely devoted to commemorating the life of Chou En-lai, on the first anniversary of his death. Chou was one of those who seemed to function as a ‘Fifth Columnist’ within the Party leadership, never being denounced as a supporter of the ‘capitalist-roaders’ but almost certainly following their line, especially in his later years. Considered as an enemy of the Revolution by those who were later branded as the ‘Gang of Four‘ by the revisionist after their coup in taking control of the Party after the death of Chairman Mao.

  • In deep memory of esteemed and beloved Premier Chou En-lai

2 – February          

3 – March    

4 – April  

5 – May    

6 – June      

7 – July   

8 – August 

9 – September    

  • The Chairman Mao Memorial Hall Successfully Completed
  • Learning from Taching Persistently
  • Through the uninhabited Qangtang region
  • The Three Gorges
  • Botswana marches on

10 – October  

11 – November   

12 – December

Below are a few examples of how China Pictorial has been transformed into a shallow and meaningless magazine more interested in consumerism than any achivements of the Chinese people. Such is the legacy of capitalism which now totally dominates Chinese society.

1985

1 – January

2006

12 – December

2013

2 – February

2019

8 – August

More on China …..

China Reconstructs

Chairman Mao Tse-tung

Chairman Mao Tse-tung

More on China …..

China Reconstructs

This informative magazine was founded in 1952 by Soong Ching-ling [Madam Sun Yat-sen], with the help of the naturalized Chinese citizen Israel Epstein. Originally it appeared bi-monthly, later becaming a monthly.

China was a campanion magazine to the other, regular publications of the Socialist People’s Republic of China, Peking Review, China Pictorial and Chinese Literature.

China in transition, selected articles, 1952-1956 by writers of China Reconstructs, Peking, 1957, 465 pages. (Big file version)

China in transition, selected articles, 1952-1956 by writers of China Reconstructs, Peking, 1957, 465 pages. (Small file version)

(Those issues with no link are copies which haven’t been available to scan. If anyone has these numbers and would be prepared to loan them to be scanned it would be very much appreciated. If the year is not listed then that means no issues at all have been available to scan to date.)

1952 – Volume I

1 – January-February

2 – March-April This is a black-and-white xerox copy of this issue

3 – May-June    

4 – July-August

5 – September-October  

6 – November-December  

1953 – Volume II

1 – January-February  

2 – March-April  

3 – May-June  

4 – July-August  

5 – September-October   

6 – November-December   

Supplement: ‘Between Husband and Wife: A Play in One Act’, by the Peking People’s Art Theatre

Supplement: Index for 1953 issues

1954 – Volume III

1 – January-February

2 – March-April

3 – May-June

Supplement: ‘Mistress Clever: A Chinese Folk Tale’

6 – November-December

Supplement: ‘Index for 1954 issues’

1956 – Volume V

1 – January

2 – February    

3 – March   

4 – April  

5 – May  

6 – June  

7 – July   

8 – August   

9 – September  

10 – October

11 – November

12 – December

Supplement: ‘Index for 1956 issues’

1957 – Volume VI

1 – January   

2 – February   

3 – March   

4 – April   

5 – May   

6 – June   

7 – July  

8 – August  

9 – September   

10 – October    

11 – November  

12 – December

Supplement: ‘Index for 1957 issues’

1966 – Volume XV

1 – January

2 – February

3 – March

4 – April  

5 – May

6 – June

7 – July   

8 – August  

9 – September

10 – October

11 – November

12 – December

1967 – Volume XVI

1 – January

Supplement: 1967 Calendar, featuring photos of clay figurines

2 – February  

3 – March   

4 – April  

5 – May

Supplement: ‘Patriotism or National Betrayal? — On the Reactionary Film Inside Story of the Ching Court’

6 – June  

7 – July   

8 – August, Special Issue on the 25th Anniversary of Chairman Mao Tse-tung’s ‘Talks at the Yenan Forum on Literature and Art’

9 – September  

10 – October  

11 – November

Supplement: ‘Along the Socialist Road or the Capitalist Road?’, by the editorial departments of Hongqi and Renmin Ribao and ‘Comments on Tao Chu’s Two Books‘, by Yao Wen-yuan

12 – December   

1968 – Volume XVII

1 – January

2 – February

3 – March  

4 – April  

5 – May  

6 – June  

7 – July  

8 – August  

9 – September 

10 – October

11 – November  

12 – December 

1969 – Volume XVIII

1 – January  

2 – February 

3 – March  

4 – April  

5 – May

6 – June  

7 – July 

8 – August  

9 – September 

10 – October 

11 – November 

12 – December

1970 – Volume XIX

1 – January

2 – February, Special Issue on the revolutionary opera ‘Taking Tiger Mountain by Strategy’

3 – March  

4 – April    

Supplement: ‘Commemorating the Centenary of the Birth of the Great Lenin’

5 – May

Includes supplement: ‘Premier Chou En-lai Pays Friendship Visit to Korea’

Extra Issue ‘People of the World, Unite and Defeat the U.S. Aggressors and All their Running Dogs!’

6 – June   

7 – July  

8 – August  

9 – September   

10 – October 

11 – November  

12 – December 

1971 – Volume XX

1 – January  

2 – February  

3 – March   

4 – April  

5 – May 

6 – June

7 – July  

8 – August

Supplement: ‘Commemorate the 50th Anniversary of the Communist Party of China’

9 – September  

10 — October

Supplement: ‘Table Tennis and Friendship’

11 – November  

12 – December

1972 – Volume XXI

1 – January

2 – February

3 – March

4 – April

Supplement: ‘Joint Communique’, of President Nixon’s visit to China

5 – May

6 – June

7 – July Includes ‘Gateway to Chinese’, beginning a new series of lessons in the Chinese language.

8 – August  

9 – September

10 – October

11 – November

12 – December

Supplement: ‘New Page in Annals of Sino-Japanese Relations’

1973 – Volume XXII

1 – January

2 – February

3 – March

4 – April

5 – May

6 – June

7 – July

8 – August

9 – September

10 – October

11 – November

Supplement: ‘The Tenth National Congress of the Communist Party of China (Documents)’

12 – December

1974 – Volume XXIII

1 – January

Supplement: Some Basic Facts About China: Ten Questions and Answers” Includes sections on People’s Communes, Neighborhood Life, the General Line for Socialist Construction, National Economic Development, the Policy of ‘Walking on Two Legs’, Women, Minorities, Education and Health.

2 – February

3 – March

4 – April

5 – May

6 – June

7 – July

8 – August

9 – September

10 – October

11 – November

12 – December

Supplement: ‘At the U.N.: Chairman of Chinese Delegation Chiao Kuan-hua’s Speech’, Oct. 2, 1974

1975 – Volume XXIV

1 – January

2 – February

3 – March

Supplement: ‘Communique of the Second Plenary Session of the Tenth Central Committee of the CPC’

4 – April

5 – May

6 – June

Supplement: ‘The Chinese People Warmly Congratulate the Great Victories of the Cambodian and the Vietnamese Peoples’

7 – July

8 – August

9 – September

10 – October

11 – November

12 – December

1976 – Volume XXV

1 – January

Supplement: ‘More Basic Facts About China’ Includes sections on Socialist Economic Construction, How the Oil Industry was Developed, Tachai Commune and the Socialist Countryside, Education, Factories Run their own Colleges, Barefoot Doctors, Cadre Schools, etc.

2 – February

3 – March

4 – April

Supplement: ‘Eternal Glory to Comrade Chou En-lai, Great Proletarian Revolutionary of the Chinese and Outstanding Communist Fighter!’

5 – May

6 – June

7 – July

8 – August

9 – September

10 – October This is the last issue of the magazine that was edited from a Maoist revolutionary perspective.

11-12 – November-December, This is the memorial issue upon the death of Mao Zedong, and includes a large number of photographs of Mao over the years. (Note also that in the photograph from the million-person mass memorial meeting (on pages 82-83), the capitalist-roaders who had just staged their coup d’état, absurdly airbrushed out the images of Mao’s wife Jiang Qing and the other three leaders in the so-called “Gang of Four” of Mao’s closest followers.)

(From 1977 onwards all the publications produced in the People’s Republic of China (including those for a foreign readership) started to reflect the world view of the ‘capitalist-roaders’ who had usurped power very soon after the death of Mao Tse-tung in September 1976. They are included here to allow readers to understand how the principles of Socialism were perverted in the early years of the restoration of capitalism.)

1977 – Volume XXVI

1 – January   

The ‘capitalist-roaders‘ step up their campaign against the Marxist-Leninists of the so-called ‘Gang of Four’ 

Supplement: Chairman Hua Kuo-feng’s speech at the Second national Conference on learning from Tachai in agriculture

2/3 – February/March     

4 – April    

Issue devoted to praise of Chou En-lai who, in his final days, had become an ally of the ‘capitaltist-roaders’ within the Party. 

5 – May   

Devoted to a character assassination of Comrade Chiang Ching and her work to establish a Socialist culture in China during the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution.

6 – June  

The attack on Chiang Ching continues.  

7 – July    

8 – August  

9 – September  

10 – October   

11 – November  

12 – December

The issue devoted almost entirely to the life of Chairman Mao Tse-tung but praising him in such a way as to denigrate his achievements and advances in Marxist-Leninist revolutionary theory and practice.

1978 – Volume XXVII

1 – January    

2 – February   

3 – March   

4 – April   

5 – May   

6 – June   

7 – July    

8 – August    

9 – September

10 – October   

Supplement: Medical Care for China’s Millions

11 – November    

12 – December   

1979 – Volume XXVIII

1 – January    

2 – February  

Includes an article by the capital-roaders reversing the verdict on the reactionary Tien An Men demonstration in April 1976 which took the opportunity provided by a memorial to Zhou Enlai to attack the so-called ‘Gang of Four‘ and the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution. Also includes a scurrilous poem slandering Chiang Ching [Jiang Qing] which was circulated at that demonstration.

3 – March  

4 – April  

5 – May  

6 – June  

7 – July    

8 – August    

9 – September    

10 – October  

11 – November  

12 – December  

1980 Volume XXIX

1 – January   

2 – February  

3 – March   

4 – April  

5 – May   

6 – June  

Includes articles about the rehabilitation of the revisionist chieftain, Liu Shaoqi, by the capitalist-roaders who came to power in a coup d’état after Mao’s death.

7 – July  

8 – August  

9 – September  

10 – October

Missing pages 25-26 and 47-48, which may have been pages of color photos. This appears to have been a printing error.

11 – November   

12 – December    

1981 – Volume XXX

1 – January  

Includes the ludicrous article “Parapsychology, Is it Real?”, which claims that there is scientific evidence that some children can see completely hidden writing and “read” it with their ears, armpits or buttocks! (An astounding example of how far the revisionist regime had already moved away from a scientific materialist perspective.)

2 – February   

Includes an article about the kangaroo court procedings by the capitalist-roaders against the so-called “Gang of Four” and other Maoist revolutionaries.

3 – March  

Includes an article entitled “Is China ‘Going Backward’?” which tries to reassure worried readers that China “is not on the capitalist road”, and contains yet more slander against the so-called “Gang of Four”. Of course it turned out that the worries of these readers were completely justified.

4 – April  

Includes an article about the sentencing of Jiang Qing and the other close followers of Mao after the conclusion of the kangaroo trial against them by the capital roaders.

5 – May  

6 – June   

7 – July  

Supplement: Death of Soong Ching Ling (Mme Sun Yet-sen)

8 – August  

Celebration of the 100th anniversay of the birth of the revolutionary writer Lu Hsun.

9 – September   

Supplement: In memory of Soong Ching Ling (1893-1981)

10 – October  

  • “Advertising Reappears in China”, lauding the appearence of billboards on public streets.
  • “Summing Up: Mao Zedong, the Cultural Revolution and 32 Years of New China”, an article about what is purported to be a “balanced” summing up of Mao and the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution in the new CCP document “Resolution on Certain Questions in the History of Our Party Since the Founding of the PRC”. In reality this document, and this article promoting it, are the worst sort of defamatory nonsense on the part of the capitalist roaders.

Insert: Subscription leaflet

11 – November  

Supplement: Chairman Ye Jianying’s elaborations on policy concerning return of Taiwan to Motherland and Peaceful Reunification in an interview with Xinhua correspondent.

12 – December  

1982 – Volume XXXI

1 – January  

2 – February   

3 – March  

4 – April  

5 – May  

6 – June   

7 – July  

8 – August  

9 – September   

10 – October  

11 – November   

12 – December  

More on China …..

Peking Review – 1978

The working class is the major force

The working class is the major force

More on China …..

Peking Review – 1978

Peking Review was the weekly political and informative magazine published between 1958 and 1978. With issue No 1 of 1979 the magazine was renamed Beijing Review, the new name bringing with it a new direction in the People’s Republic of China and was an open statement of the reintroduction of capitalism in the erstwhile Socialist Republic.

The issues and topics included in 1978:

Throughout 1978 those ‘capitalist-roaders’ that had gained control of the once revolutionary Communist Party of China further consolidated their power and, the attacks on the so-called ‘Gang of Four’ were put on the back burner and they attempted to justify their restoration of capitalism in the country through a distortion of the Marxist ideology – using Marxism to destroy Marxism (as the Communist Party of China once accused the Communist Party of the Soviet Union of doing).

This blog is not interested in promoting revisionism and the destruction of Socialist societies so the last issues of Peking Review will be the last to be found here. Even the capitalist-roaders in Peking realised this and drew a distinct line with the past by changing the name of the capital city, and the weekly magazine, and so from issue No. I of 1979 the magazine was renamed Beijing Review.

For those interested in the magazine from 1979 can see all issues from 1979 to 1990, and then occasional issues after that date, at massline.org.

  • Why did Chang Chun-chiao kick up a fuss over the question of ownership
  • Chairman Mao’s letter to Comrade Chen Yi – his letter of July 21, 1965, discussing poetry
  • On the situation in China’s science and education
  • Initial success in economic construction
  • The tasks of continuing the revolution
  • Develop productive forces and continue the revolution
  • How did Marx and Engels differentiate Europe’s political forces? – answering questions regarding the ‘Renmin Ribao’ article on the theory of the there worlds
  • Defence of national independence and the second world countries
  • China’s industrialisation: how to achieve it
  • To each according to his work: Socialist principle in distribution
  • On ‘Grasping the key link’
  • Unite and strive to build a modern, powerful Socialist country! – Report on the work of the Government delivered at National People’s Congress on February 26, 1978 – Hua Kuo-feng
  • The Constitution of the People’s Republic of China
  • Developing advanced military science of Chinese Proletariat
  • Basic principles of ‘Manifesto of the Communist Party’ always remain fresh
  • Left, Ultra-‘Left’ and Fake Left
  • Integrating moral encouragement with material reward
  • Refuting a wrong assessment of literature and art
  • Speech at the National Educational Work Conference – Teng Hsiao-ping
  • Research work in philosophy and social sciences unshackled
  • China enters a new period
  • Mass organisations reactivated
  • History of overseas Chinese and their glorious tradition
  • Statement on Vietnam’s expulsion of Chinese residents
  • Strive for modernisation of agriculture
  • Writers and artists criticise so-called ‘Dictatorship of a sinister line’
  • Is Cuba a Non-aligned country?
  • Strengthening political work – speeches at the All-army Political Work Conference by Yeh Chien-ying and Teng Hsiao-ping
  • China cancels appointment of Consul-General in Ho Chi Minh City
  • China’s policy is open, aboveboard, consistent – refuting Soviet slanders on China’s policy towards overseas Chinese
  • ‘Talk at an Enlarged Working Conference convened by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China’ – January 30, 1962 – Mao Tse-tung
  • A fundamental principle of Marxism
  • Learn from Taching Movement surges on
  • Why Vietnamese authorities provoked Vietnam-Kampuchea border conflict
  • Time will tell the true from the false – ‘Renmin Ribao’ commentator on China’s aid to Vietnam
  • Implementing the Socialist principle ‘To each according to his work’
  • Heighten our vigilance and get prepared to fight a war
  • Cadres are the servants of the people
  • A milestone in history of Sino-Yugoslav relations
  • The militia’s role in a future war
  • Ideological education in a primary school
  • Pseudo-Leftism and reality – criticising the ‘Gang of Four’
  • Away with cultural autocracy
  • Women’s movement in China: guidelines and tasks
  • New successes in Socialist construction
  • How Marxists look at material interests
  • Why China imports technology and equipment
  • How to speed up China’s agricultural development
  • Learn from Mao Tse-tung – Chou En-lai
  • Basic principle for trade union in a new period
  • Observe economic laws, speed up the ‘Four Modernisations’
  • Can China quicken its pace of Socialist construction
  • Glorious mission of the Chinese Youth
  • Tien An Men incident: completely revolutionary action
  • The truth about the Tien An Men incident
  • Vice-Premier Teng on domestic situation
  • How do Chinese trade unions function?
  • Mistakes must be corrected when ever discovered
  • New Hanoi hoax
  • Communique of the Third Plenary Session of the 11th Central Committee of the Communist party of China

Available issues of Peking Review:

1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1978

There’s an index for the first part of the year in No. 26 and for the second part of the year in No. 52.

Peking Review - 1978 - 01

Peking Review – 1978 – 01

Peking Review - 1978 - 02

Peking Review – 1978 – 02

Peking Review - 1978 - 03

Peking Review – 1978 – 03

Peking Review - 1978 - 04

Peking Review – 1978 – 04

 

 

 

 

 

 

Peking Review - 1978 - 05

Peking Review – 1978 – 05

Peking Review - 1978 - 06

Peking Review – 1978 – 06

Peking Review - 1978 - 07

Peking Review – 1978 – 07

Peking Review - 1978 - 08

Peking Review – 1978 – 08

 

 

 

 

 

 

Peking Review - 1978 - 09

Peking Review – 1978 – 09

Peking Review - 1978 - 10

Peking Review – 1978 – 10

Peking Review - 1978 - 11

Peking Review – 1978 – 11

Peking Review - 1978 - 12

Peking Review – 1978 – 12

 

 

 

 

 

 

Peking Review - 1978 - 13

Peking Review – 1978 – 13

Peking Review - 1978 - 14

Peking Review – 1978 – 14

Peking Review - 1978 - 15

Peking Review – 1978 – 15

Peking Review - 1978 - 16

Peking Review – 1978 – 16

 

 

 

 

 

 

Peking Review - 1978 - 17

Peking Review – 1978 – 17

Peking Review - 1978 - 18

Peking Review – 1978 – 18

Peking Review - 1978 - 19

Peking Review – 1978 – 19

Peking Review - 1978 - 20

Peking Review – 1978 – 20

 

 

 

 

 

 

Peking Review - 1978 - 21

Peking Review – 1978 – 21

Peking Review - 1978 - 22

Peking Review – 1978 – 22

Peking Review - 1978 - 23

Peking Review – 1978 – 23

Peking Review - 1978 - 24

Peking Review – 1978 – 24

 

 

 

 

 

 

Peking Review - 1978 - 25

Peking Review – 1978 – 25

Peking Review - 1978 - 26

Peking Review – 1978 – 26

Peking Review - 1978 - 26 - Index

Peking Review – 1978 – 26 – Index

Peking Review - 1978 - 27

Peking Review – 1978 – 27

 

 

 

 

 

 

Peking Review - 1978 - 27 - Supplement

Peking Review – 1978 – 27 – Supplement

Peking Review - 1978 - 28

Peking Review – 1978 – 28

Peking Review - 1978 - 29

Peking Review – 1978 – 29

Peking Review - 1978 - 30

Peking Review – 1978 – 30

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Peking Review - 1978 - 31

Peking Review – 1978 – 31

Peking Review - 1978 - 32

Peking Review – 1978 – 32

Peking Review - 1978 - 33

Peking Review – 1978 – 33

Peking Review - 1978 - 34

Peking Review – 1978 – 34

 

 

 

 

 

 

Peking Review - 1978 - 35

Peking Review – 1978 – 35

Peking Review - 1978 - 36

Peking Review – 1978 – 36

Peking Review - 1978 - 37

Peking Review – 1978 – 37

Peking Review - 1978 - 38

Peking Review – 1978 – 38

 

 

 

 

 

 

Peking Review - 1978 - 39

Peking Review – 1978 – 39

Peking Review - 1978 - 40

Peking Review – 1978 – 40

Peking Review - 1978 - 41

Peking Review – 1978 – 41

Peking Review - 1978 - 42

Peking Review – 1978 – 42

 

 

 

 

 

 

Peking Review - 1978 - 43

Peking Review – 1978 – 43

Peking Review - 1978 - 44

Peking Review – 1978 – 44

Peking Review - 1978 - 45

Peking Review – 1978 – 45

Peking Review - 1978 - 46

Peking Review – 1978 – 46

 

 

 

 

 

 

Peking Review - 1978 - 47

Peking Review – 1978 – 47

Peking Review - 1978 - 48

Peking Review – 1978 – 48

Peking Review - 1978 - 49

Peking Review – 1978 – 49

Peking Review - 1978 - 50

Peking Review – 1978 – 50

 

 

 

 

 

 

Peking Review - 1978 - 51

Peking Review – 1978 – 51

Peking Review - 1978 - 52

Peking Review – 1978 – 52

 

 

 

 

 

Beijing Review

From issue No. 1 of 1979 the weekly political and informative magazine Peking Review changed its name to Beijing Review. On page 3 of that number the editors made the open declaration of the change in the direction of the erstwhile ‘People’s Republic of China’.

By stating that the Communist Party of China (under the control then of Teng Hsiao-Ping/Deng Xiaoping ) sought

‘to accomplish socialist modernisation by the end of the century and turn China …. into an economically developed and fully democratic socialist country’

the CPC was openly declaring the rejection of the revolutionary path, which the country had been following since 1949, and the adoption of the road that would inevitably lead to the full scale establishment of capitalism.

For those who would like to follow this downward spiral into the murky depths of capitalism and imperialism in the issues of Beijing Review (complete for the years 1979-1990 – intermittently thereafter) you can do so by going to bannedthought – which also serves as an invaluable resource for more material about China during its revolutionary phase.

More on China …..