Yesterday in my Chinese politics class we discussed Marxist ideology in general and Mao’s Report on the Hunan Peasant’s Movement in particular.  The aim of the conversation was to come to an understanding of how a foreign ideology might inspire revolutionaries in China in the early twentieth century. And it was a good class; the students came up with some very good points.   But as I was preparing for it (and not getting back to posting on the Chinese New Year – sorry) a thought came to me, a thought that I do not think I had thought quite that way before.

     In adapting Marxist ideas and theories to Chinese circumstances, Mao was acting somewhat (OK, not a whole lot, but somewhat) like a Taoist.

     In the Hunan Report, Mao argues that peasants have a certain revolutionary role and potential, a point that pushed against more orthodox interpretations of Marx.  In the Communist Manifesto (which the students had also read for the class), Marx and Engels refer to "the idiocy of rural life."  Peasants are backward, mired in socio-economic and political circumstances that are not progressive or revolutionary.  Historical change will not be driven from the countryside but from the titanic battle of urban bourgeoisie and proletariat, etc.

     Mao was perfectly aware of this orthodox interpretation.  But he saw the revolutionary potential of the peasantry.  So, he adapted to the circumstances before him.  He did not attempt to make the peasants into something they were not (not yet at least) but, rather, he looked to change the Party’s revolutionary strategy in light of the context he found himself in.

    Adapting to circumstance is rather like following where Way leads, no?  OK, I know I cannot push this too far.  But it is Taoist in the sense that Sun Tzu has a similarly context-dependent orientation.  When, in the Art of War, Sun discusses "ground" – the natural terrain and, I would argue, the broader context of any particular battle – he is suggesting that the first job for any military strategist is to figure out where in Way one is: what the immediate surroundings are, what might be possible in a particular situation, what should be avoided because it is wholly impractical.  Man cannot determine the context, or "ground," but must fit his actions and endeavors to the circumstances.  There is something Taoist about that sensibility, and it is something that comes through in Mao’s Hunan Peasants Report.

      So, one question is: if this is true, how Taoist was Mao?  Not much, I would venture.  And certainly he lost whatever inkling of Taoism he might have had once he gained power, which we can date, perhaps, as early as 1935, when he took control of the Party, or, at least, 1949, when the Party seized state power.   But there might have been a bit of a Taoist in him in his early years, in the same sense that there is a bit of a Taoist in Confucians (at least in their metaphysics), or that there is a bit of Taoism in Chinese culture more generally.  He may have understood himself as a modernizer, and ultimately embraced the Legalism of Qin Shi Huangdi, but maybe he did not transcend his own cultural context as much as he wanted.

      A second point to make about Mao’s fragmentary Taoism is to note the tragedy of its passing.  Once in power, of course, Mao became quite convinced of his transformative powers.  He would no longer follow the impulse that distinguishes the Hunan Report, the willingness to step back and apprehend the context and then work to make what is possible emerge from that context.  No, he would impose his will and his vision and his strategy on China, regardless of circumstance.   And millions and millions of people would die, most horribly in the Great Leap Forward, throughout his rein. 

     Just another sad reminder: better a Taoist than a Legalist.

Sam Crane Avatar

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5 responses to “Mao and Tao”

  1. Justsomeguy Avatar
    Justsomeguy

    “better a Taoist than a Legalist.”
    You are assuming there is a difference. Remember, Yellow Emperor Daoism was the first legalist school.
    I’m just sayin’ . . .
    Better a Confucian on the outside and a legalist on the inside than a crypto-legalist on the outside and a legalist on the inside, na?
    But I will say that I view the failure of the GLF as more one of bureaucratic alienation (and if that ain’t Confucian, I don’t know what is), and I think that is a good lesson to keep in mind. Confucius had a lot of bad things to say about busy-bodies who worries about things outside their ministry, but he had far worse things to say about people who were only concerned with their ministry and being promoted within it. Zhu Xi made it clear that the chain-logic of the Great Learning wasn’t a chain at all, but rather that all elements should be practiced all the time by and educated individual. That is what is missing here.
    Though I will say I admire legalism for its state-building ability. And, while I don’t see a jailer raising a rebellion (though the PRC is doing its best to provide ample candidates for that role) I do like the return to Confucian values the Party has been taking recently. Who knows, in ten years, I might even see eye-to-eye with them.

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  2. gmoke Avatar

    Better the reed than the oak, as they say, especially when the big wind comes.

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  3. isha Avatar
    isha

    1.
    http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/FD01Ad04.html
    2.
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/g2/story/0,3604,447597,00.ht
    Mao will be different thing for different people for a long time, both inside and outside China. Objective assessment of him is absolutely important to make now. One might have to wait for 100 years or more to be remotely neutral.
    The gap between Liu and Buruma is so wide and it can never be bridged by words. Here is the Taoist disdain of futile discourse.
    From my personal bias, Buruma know his interest very well and he is running full speed to fulfill his mission: to render the globe “Others” helpless and divided, so the “Masters of the Universe” could rule supreme. Mao, by picking up the Chinese pieces together, made their dream uncomfortable, or even a nightmare. Therefore, he can’t be blame for showing such venom to Mao. After all, one can’t ask him for more.
    Arab or Muslim world is still seeking their Mao; they have the hope since they still have their culture. Native Americans forever lose the hope even to seek their Mao…
    Lao Tze is right the word is such futile tool…

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  4. Peter Avatar
    Peter

    “Heaven and earth are not benevolent, they use all things as straw dogs. The sage is not benevolent, he uses the people as straw dogs.”
    “Of old those who excelled in the pursuit of the way did not use it to enlighten the people but to hoodwink them.”
    Now that you mention it, it does seem that there are parts of the Dao De Jing which might have appealed to Mao. Yes, I know those parts can be interpreted in a more humanistic fashion but readers are free to choose their own interpretations.

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  5. Sam Avatar

    Yes, Taoism was used by Legalists, especially Han Fei Tzu, to rationalize the role of the ruler. I am one who sees this as a distortion of the spirit of Taoism but we cannot deny the historical fact of the Legalist usurpation of Taoism. Perhaps it suggests a certain weakness in Taoist thought that renders it vulnerable to such manipulation.
    And since Mao was inspired by Qin Shi Huangdi, we should expect to find some Taoist resonances in his rule.

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