Events at The University of Manchester
  • University home
  • Events
  • Home
  • Exhibitions
  • Conferences
  • Lectures and seminars
  • Performances
  • Events for prospective students
  • Sustainability events
  • Family events
  • All Events

Revolution, Rebellion & Empire on Early Maoist China's Tibetan Borderland

image
Dates:5 December 2023
Times:17:00 - 18:30
What is it:Seminar
Organiser:Manchester China Institute
Who is it for:University staff, External researchers, Adults, Current University students, General public
Speaker:Benno Weiner
See travel and contact information
Add to your calendar

More information

  • REGISTER HERE

Other events

  • In category "Seminar"
  • By Manchester China Institute

Join Benno Weiner's in-person talk on "Revolution, Rebellion, and the Afterlives of Empire on a Tibetan Borderland of Early Maoist China".

When in 1949 the Chinese Communist Party “liberated” the area of eastern Tibet known as Amdo, it declared that Amdo Tibetans at last had become “masters of their own homes.” Party leaders vowed that the exploitation and discrimination Tibetans had suffered under previous regimes would quickly be replaced by ethnic equality, political autonomy, and material prosperity. Rather than introducing socialist reforms, the CCP initially pursued relatively moderate “United Front” policies meant to “gradually,” persuade Tibetans of their membership in the new Chinese nation. This all changed at the outset of 1958’s Great Leap Forward, when United Front gradualism was jettisoned in favor of rapid collectivization, and pluralistic pledges gave way to ethnoreligious persecution. This led to large-scale rebellion, which was met by a brutal counterinsurgency, followed by devastating famine. Despite promises of a “voluntary” and “organic” transformation, Amdo was incorporated into the People’s Republic of China through the overwhelming and often indiscriminate deployment of state violence. In this talk, Benno Weiner discusses 1958’s Amdo Rebellion and explores ways in which the violence of 1958 and its aftermath continues to cloud the state’s efforts to integrate Tibetans into the modern Chinese nation-state.

Speaker

Benno Weiner

Role: Associate Professor

Organisation: Carnegie Mellon University

Biography: Benno Weiner is Associate Professor in the Department of History at Carnegie Mellon University. He is author of the Chinese Revolution on the Tibetan Frontier and co-editor of Contested Memories: Tibetan History under Mao Retold. His most recent article, “‘This Absolutely is not a Hui Rebellion!’ The Ethnopolitics of Great Han Chauvinism in Early Maoist China,” was published in the October issue of the journal Twentieth Century China.

  • https://www.cmu.edu/dietrich/history/people/faculty/weiner.html

Travel and Contact Information

Find event

The Portico Library
57 Mosley Street
Manchester

 

Contact us

  • +44 (0) 161 306 6000

Find us

The University of Manchester
Oxford Rd
Manchester
M13 9PL
UK

Connect with the University

  • Facebook page for The University of Manchester
  • X (formerly Twitter) page for The University of Manchester
  • YouTube page for The University of Manchester
  • Instagram page for The University of Manchester
  • TikTok page for The University of Manchester
  • LinkedIn page for The University of Manchester

  • Privacy /
  • Copyright notice /
  • Accessibility /
  • Freedom of information /
  • Charitable status /
  • Royal Charter Number: RC000797
  • Close menu
  • Home
    • Featured events
    • Today's events
    • The Whitworth events
    • Manchester Museum events
    • Jodrell Bank Discovery Centre events
    • Martin Harris Centre events
    • The John Rylands Library events
    • Exhibitions
    • Conferences
    • Lectures and seminars
    • Performances
    • Events for prospective students
    • Sustainability events
    • Family events
    • All events