Acknowledgments
Introduction: Mao Consumption and the Chinese Political
Imaginary
Badges in Context: The Early Years of the Cultural Revolution
Manufacturing Mao
An Iconography of Mao Badges
Bloodlines, Political Capital, and Badges
Aluminum Gods: Mao Badges and Chinese Ritual Life
The Red Old Days: Heritage, Historical Memory, and the Endurance of
Mao
References
Index
Melissa Schrift is an assistant professor of Anthropology and Sociology at Marquette University.
This interesting book belongs on the shelf of those of us
interested in the material culture of the Cultural Revolution.
*China Journal*
Strangely moving. . . . While [in China, Schrift] discovered a
subculture of people who collected buttons bearing portraits of the
Great Helmsman: thousands of varieties had been manufactured from
the Cultural Revolution, when they served as one of the few
permitted forms of personal adornment or aesthetic display. . . . I
found reading the book a surprisingly emotional experience.
*Newsday; Newsday Long Island*
A wonderfully rich and riveting account, Biography of a Chairman
Mao Badge represents an important contribution to our understanding
of the Cultural Revolution and its place in Chinese culture.
Schrift provides an informative examination of the Mao cultÆs
recent transformation into its present form of pop cultural
campiness.
*author of Sex, Death, and Hierarchy in a Chinese City*
An excellent study of symbolism and factionalism in Maoist China.
Schrift shows how mundane objects were transformed into sacred
icons of revolutionary ideology. This book offers new insights into
the dynamics of the Cultural Revolution.
*author of Golden Arches East: McDonaldÆs in East Asia*
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