I had to read the English translation since I cannot read or speak Mandarin unfortunately. Its a really good and engaging book imo, gets better with every page and supposedly loveecraft level shit goes down by the end.

In the beginning tho there are a few scenes describing the Cultural Revolution and struggle sessions.

Is it true that Einstein's theories of Relativity were frowned upon by red guard university students because they were seen as capitalist propaganda?

And is it true that some university lecturers were beaten to death during the struggle sessions? I mean cool if they deserved it (feudal landlords etc.) but the Relativity part seems a bit like the author making shit up.

Its funny how despite this the author is not even overtly rabidly critical of Marxism or Communism itself, unlike western authors who spend 10 pages to explain why "muh gommunism bad" every time such events get brought up. Liu seems to be critical of just the events which transpired during the cultural revolution.

You shouldn't pirate the book from z-library because its very unethical and a breach of IP, so you will be sent to hell when you die.

    • SuperNovaCouchGuy [any]
      hexagon
      ·
      3 years ago

      The ideological pressure to ensure all academic inquiry conformed with Marxism intensified after the Hundred Flowers Campaign in 1957, wherein those who voiced liberal or western ideas risked being denounced as 'rightists' and sentenced to up to 20 years hard labour.

      Very based :mao-clap:

      Historian Jonathan Fenby uses the analogy of witchhunts in late medieval Europe to understand the early Cultural Revolution...

      When looking for "le bad" to compare "gommunism" to, Historian Jonathan Fenby apparently hasn't heard of the very modern Red Scare/McCarthyism, the White Terror, or the ongoing 2020s yellow peril lol