27 January 2014
Delivering a lecture on ’China After Thirty Years: Reflections on a Changing Society’ at the ORF Kolkata Chapter on 21 January, Dr. Sen said the idea of ’China Dream’ could have occurred to President Xi Jinping from the 2008 Beijing Olympics for which he was in charge of preparations. The motto of Beijing Olympics, ’One World, One Dream, ’may have helped shape Xi’s idea of the ’One China Dream’ which is also being referred to as the ’Chinese Dream.’
The distinction between individual aspirations and a national dream is clear to the Chinese government where there are contradictions between the political system and the consumerism-driven economy, Dr. Sen added. He said that the Third Plenum tries to come to terms with such contradictions between the government and the society at large. During this phase, Dr. Sen said, there does not seem to have been a clear direction guiding reforms and policies to address the needs of a changing society. These seem to be the main goals under President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang.
Dr. Sen said that the year 2013 could be the beginning of a watershed moment in China’s contemporary history.
He said the emergence of China Dream goes back to the economic reforms, social changes, and political transitions of the 1980s. The catch phrase throughout most of the 1980s, especially after the 12thNational Congress, was ’spiritual pollution,’-- this was the Chinese government attempt to limit "undesirable" influences from the West, both politically and socially. In 1982 when the 12th National Congress took place, China was coming out of the period of Cultural Revolution. The Gang of Four was dismantled by this time.And while the need for incorporating the former Red Guards and some of the supporters of the Cultural Revolution into the nation "re-building" process was recognised, the full account of the violence and sufferings during the period had not been fully attempted until recently. Dr. Sen sees this attempt to reconcile with the recent past and the public acknowledgements of the transgressions and wrongdoings the biggest change in Chinese society during his thirty years of experience with China.
The life of people in China in the early ’80s was much slower compared to the present time. A distinction between urban and rural areas and between people employed in various sectors was not so great. There was, however, a clear distinction between foreigners and Chinese. The Chinese were not allowed to enter five star hotels, possess foreign currency, travel abroad, or encouraged to marry foreigners.
Prof. Hari Vasudevan, Professor of History and Director, Centre for China Studies, Calcutta University said that the presence of the Communist Party of China (CCP) as an omnipresent force for generations of Chinese people distinguishes China from other countries in Europe or Asia.
Prof. Vasudevan observed that there is not one but ’many Chinas’. He said that conflicting notions of China are to be found in the contrasts between life in town and country, SEZ, non-SEZ and proto-SEZ territories, state and private enterprises, and ethnicities and generations among the Chinese.
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