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Hello, my lovely Twixtas. It's me, Caitlin.
I am here, you are here, and we are all ready to proceed with the show. But before we can do that, I have to tell you, this is an adult podcast spoken by adults to other adults about adulty things in an adulty way, covering a range of adult subjects, and you should be an adult too. Do you feel safer? I'm glad you feel safer. I certainly feel safer. Right, on with the show! They say that behind every great man, there's a great woman.
I've never really believed that. But what about evil men? Are there crap and evil women behind them too? And whilst it's the men in these horror stories that seem to get the most attention, in this brand new miniseries, we're exploring the lives of four of the wives of some of history's most bloody and notorious dictators.
Were they victims? She was certainly young at the beginning. She was drawn to the flame, absolutely. Or were they enablers? She famously defied the judges, calling them fascists. And she said, I was Mao's dog. I bit who he told me to bite. She's aware of the anti-Semitism. It's not that she looks the other way. She doesn't think it's a problem. She doesn't need to look the other way. What was the...
was their life like behind closed doors? She's grown up in a revolutionary family and she married a revolutionary. So you can assume that she's on the revolutionary side. And were any of these women thirsty for power themselves? The rest of the leadership was dead set against it. They sensed her ambition. They had an instinct about her. I'm Kate Lister and these are The Real Wives of Dictators.
Episode 4, Zheng Qing, a.k.a. the wife of Chairman Mao. What do you look for in a man? Oh, money, of course. You're supposed to rise when an adult speaks to you. I make perfect copies of whatever my boss needs by just turning it up and pushing the button. Yes, social courtesy does make a difference. Goodness, what beautiful times. Goodness, there's nothing to do with it, there is?
Hello and welcome back to Betwixt the Shades, the history of sex, scandal and society with me, Kate Lister.
The arc of Zheng Qing's life is nothing short of incredible slash terrifying. From her working class upbringing to being an actor in 1930s Shanghai to spearheading the cultural revolution with Chairman Mao in the 1960s and 70s, and we all know how that went. But for better, or as we're going to cover quite a lot of, worse, this woman left her mark. Why was culture at the heart of the revolution in China?
Why was the Communist Party so wary of her? And how did she use her powers to wreak a terrible revenge on any ex-lovers who'd wronged her? Well, joining me today is author and historian Linda Javin, author of Bombard the Headquarters, The Cultural Revolution in China, and she is going to help us get to know this woman a little bit better. And without further ado, let's do it.
Hello and welcome to Betwixt the Sheets. It's only Linda Javin. How are you doing? I'm doing very well and very excited to be here, Kate. Thank you so much for asking me. It's my absolute pleasure.
You are here to talk to us about the wife of Mao Zedong. And this is a history I really don't know very much about at all. So I'm thrilled to learn about this today. Can I start as a first question? How do you pronounce her name?
You pronounce it Jiang Qing. But you can say Madam Mao, if you like. What would she wanted to have been called? Madam Mao? No, I think she would have wanted to be called Jiang Qing. She definitely wanted to have respect and power in her own right. But she also knew that...
the source of her power was the fact that she was Madame Mao. Wow. And you have been researching the history of China and you are the author of The Shortest History of China and Bombard the Headquarters, The Cultural Revolution in China. So can I ask, what brought you to studying Chinese history? What's your origin story with this?
Oh, it's quite funny. I was studying at university and I thought I was going to do a degree in political science. That was very much my bent. And I basically wandered into a course on Chinese history and just was wrapped and studied more and more, took more and more courses until the professor, the head of the department said, you really have to study Chinese. And I was like, oh, I don't know about that. Yeah.
I didn't do well with French in high school, you know. And he said, no, you have to. Well, that's that. You know, yeah. He said, you won't understand China unless you learn Chinese and you won't. You love Chinese history, but you're never going to get there without Chinese language. So he pushed me. I did that and I thank him every day of my life. Wow. I don't know very much about
about Chinese history, especially in the 20th century. I know there was the rise of communism. I know that Mao came to power. I don't know what was happening in China before that, that led to the rise of communism, because it hadn't been communist before. So can you paint us a picture of the world that Changqing grew up in? Yeah, sure. She was born in 1914. That was three years after the last dynasty was overthrown.
That dynasty was the Qing dynasty. It had seen some horrific incursions into Chinese sovereignty and real humiliation of China by Western powers, beginning with the Opium War. That was a real marker in history.
And people began to ask, what is wrong with this system? What is wrong with this dynastic system? We just keep repeating the same things and they used to work and they're not working in the modern world. Why isn't China a modern nation? What do we need to do to modernize? In the end, there was a Republican revolution. That was in 1911. But in
Because the political culture, it wasn't mature at all. And there were so many people who still kind of wanted to be emperor themselves, including the first president of the republic. Wow. Exactly. That the republic very quickly destabilized and men with armies or control over militias and so on began...
more or less taking over parts of China. They were known as warlords. It was a really unsettled time. Meanwhile, the intellectuals, the writers, the students, other people were saying, we have to change our culture because if we want
to create a modern nation, to have this republic succeed. It's not just about politics. It's not just about having a legislature. It's about thinking differently about women's rights. It's thinking differently about workers. It's thinking differently about education, all of this stuff. She was born at a moment of extreme ferment. When she was seven years old, 1921, that was the year that the Communist Party was formed in China.
It was inspired, obviously, by the Soviet Union, but it saw the other people who had ideas for how to reform China as their ideas didn't go far enough. It wasn't going to work. You had to have a whole scale revolution. So she's born in this time of extreme political, intellectual and cultural ferment. And she was born into poverty.
Her father was horrible. It's said that he once hit her with a spade and broke a tooth. Oh my God. Wow. Okay. Yeah. Her mother, who was a secondary wife or a concubine, fled with her. So she didn't have anything like a privileged upbringing, but she had this
steely determination. And she went eventually to drama school, of all things. Wow. Okay. And she ended up in Shanghai. She was born in Shandong province, a Northeastern province, not terribly far from Shanghai. Shanghai at the time was a center of ferment, of creativity. It
A lot of people were drawn to Shanghai. Bertrand Russell, all these other people would visit. And it had a kind of a cosmopolitan air. It developed into a real cosmopolitan city until the communists whacked it after the revolution. But she ended up in Shanghai.
and played Nora on the stage in Doll's House. What? So she's an actress? Oh, yes. So she did drama school. She ends up in Shanghai. She's on the stage. She was playing Nora. Her husband on the stage was a man called Shaodan, who was a really handsome, handsome, handsome, very dishy Chinese actor and one of the most popular of his day.
She had a huge crush on him. This would not bode well for him in later years. We'll get back to that. That sounds ominous. Okay. Yes. And I actually knew his widow and she told me a lot about this later. But she was on stage, then came into contact with people who were making films. She became a film actress. Wow. She
She wasn't called Jiang Qing at the time. Her birth name was Li Yunhe, which means crane in the clouds, which is very sweet and poetic. She changed her name to Lan Ping, Blue Apple, as an actress.
And she only changed her name to Jiang Qing later. So she went through a couple of name changes. So there she is. She's an actress. Meanwhile, there's a lot of political ferment in Shanghai. And the film scene is dividing, as it were, into the left-leaning, progressive people who were just so tested by so many things about how
the West and Japan had humiliated China and continued to humiliate China. The Versailles Treaty that was at the end of World War I was incredibly insulting. China had sent
I think it's 120,000, a lot of workers over. They dug the trenches in Europe. They transported the wounded. They put together ammunition. They did dirty work, hard work. They did all of this. And at the end of World War I, the Treaty of Versailles, Germany was defeated and the treaty gave Germany's territories in China to Japan. Oh, wow.
Instead of restoring them to Chinese sovereignty. Right. Okay. Where on this divide did she sit? Was she angry at the West or was she more conservative? I think I know what you're going to say, but just give us an idea of what were her political views at this time? So she fell in with the progressives and the left-wing filmmakers and the people of that time who were in Shanghai and
It's uncertain exactly how much she did in the communist underground, whether she was a full-fledged part of it or not. There's some indications that not everyone completely trusted her or liked her enough to sort of... She's sneaky. She's a little bit sneaky. She's self-aggrandizing, although I don't know how much of that was present in Shanghai. It became much more a part of her personality later. Anyway...
The Japanese invaded. She left Shanghai and...
At this time, the communists had gotten to a place called Yan'an. They had established a number of Soviets in the countryside where they disappropriated the land from landlords, distributed among the peasants, and ran parts of the countryside along Soviet lines. These were called Soviets. But the government at the time, which was very, very corrupt,
very right wing and very anti-communist to the extent of preferring to fight the communists to fighting the Japanese at times. They had encircled one of the major Soviets and the communists had broken out of this encirclement and fought their way across this very, very, very long and tortuous and unplanned route that took them to the Northwest. That's called the Long March.
So in the middle of the Long March, Mao had established himself as the leader of the communists. He wasn't when they started out, but he was when they got to this place called Yan'an.
He was formulating all of his major thoughts on how society should be restructured, on how the arts should be serving the people, etc. It was a very important time. Lots of intellectuals, lots of left-wing people, and even a few foreign journalists who were sympathetic to the cause made it to Yan'an and eventually Jiang Qing did too.
But it wasn't an easy place to get to, but it was a place of political pilgrimage. Jiang Qing went. She was a young and beautiful actress. She was in her early 20s. Mao was in his mid-40s.
Mao always had a roving eye, but Mao was married at the time to his third wife. His first wife... Yeah. But the story is this. His first wife was an arranged marriage. It's said that they didn't actually consummate it. He was very much against arranged marriages. The second wife, Yang Kaihui, was a revolutionary who was shot. So she was a martyr. She was a revolutionary martyr. And the third wife...
He Zizhen was a revolutionary, a fighter. She'd born Mao a number of children. She'd gone on the Long March. She'd suffered a lot and she had some mental problems for which she was sent to the Soviet Union to recover. But the other people in the Communist Party, the other leaders had so much respect for her that when Jiang Qing comes along and catches Mao's eye...
They were dead set against that. Ah. Becoming anything. I'll be back with Linda after this short break.
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So she wasn't popular in the beginning? Oh, no, not at all. And also, they didn't trust her enough. They didn't believe she had the true revolutionary credentials, especially to be with somebody like the leader of the party at the time, you know? So there she is, this pretty young actress, and she catches Mao's eye and he insists that he wants to marry her. Had she been married before? Yes, three times as well. Oh, chung ching, wow, okay. Yeah.
And she had a number of lovers and all this sort of thing. It was pretty wild.
Mao wants to marry Jiang Qing. He wants to divorce his wife. The rest of the leadership was dead set against it. In the end, Mao insisted and they agreed on one condition, that she stay out of politics for at least 20 years. Ooh, okay. Because they sensed her ambition. They had an instinct about her. And so they agreed to that.
And the only person who really stood up for Mao and Jiang Qing being able to get married, the main person was a man called Kang Sheng, who would later become very crucial in the Cultural Revolution and an ally of Jiang Qing. He appears then in their story. So then things happened. What happened was there was the war against the Japanese that ended with the surrender of the Japanese in 1945.
Following that, there was a civil war that broke out between the communists and the nationalist government. The communists won in 1949. That's all go, isn't it? Oh, it's go, go, go. Yeah. Wow. You said it was turbulent, but this is really turbulent. Oh, super turbulent. We haven't even gotten into the details of the war and who fought and how they fought it and all that sort of thing. It was very brutal. The
country by 1949 when the communists founded the People's Republic of China. At that point, the country was pretty much, it was a field of devastation. You can just imagine the communists had to figure out how do we get
enough hospitals? How do we educate this populace that has a huge rate of illiteracy? How do we do all this stuff? How do we feed them? How do we feed them? Exactly. Now, Mao always felt that ideology was really important. You didn't want to just remake the country's systems. You had to remake the people's thinking. I
And this is something crucial to remember when we learn what happened in the end with Jiang Qing, because they allow her to take a fairly minor role in the film industry, which is fine. So she can't do too much damage there as far as the other leaders are concerned. Mao, meanwhile, is accelerating the collectivization of property, is rolling out ideological campaigns.
thought reform campaign after ideological campaign. People are beginning to go to labor reform. It's beginning to get pretty real. By the time he launches the Great Leap Forward in 1958, which was supposed to be a complete leap into real communism, total collectivization of property, the creation of people's communes everywhere.
This was a major factor in a three-year famine that saw something like 40 million people die. Holy hell. We don't know the exact figures. Wow. Between 30 and 70 million. So by the early 60s, Mao was being sidelined.
by more practical leaders who thought, let's just bring, let's let the peasants grow something besides the crops we tell them to grow so that they can have something to eat. Let them keep a little bit, let them sell a little bit. Mao was furious. He was sidelined. Meanwhile, Jiang Qing had been focusing on her own little things. One of them being, how do you reform a culture? How
How do you make it both modern and revolutionary? So she'd already begun thinking about how do you change, for example, Peking Opera? You know, how do you create revolutionary operas? Revolutionary operas. Yes. Meanwhile, she's nurturing all of her grievances. He's nurturing his grievances. They're both looking at other people in the party and
and thinking, you've done this to me, you've done that to me. This is a very simplified way of putting it. The paranoia is growing and the nastiness within the party. The paranoia, the nastiness. So what happened in 1966, to cut a long, complicated story short, was that Mao declared that it was time to bombard the headquarters, the post office.
the party passed a document, the cultural revolution, the great proletarian cultural revolution was on. Why did
Did it happen? Mao wanted revenge against his enemies. Mao wanted to ensure that China did not go into what he considered the stasis, the terrifying revisionist stasis of the Soviet Union under Khrushchev, where Khrushchev was negating everything that Stalin did. This really upset him. And what's Zheng Qing doing this whole time? She's just working on her operas, working on her stuff.
And her ears are very much pricked up and following all this. The Cultural Revolution begins and now she can really come into her own because one of the big things of the Cultural Revolution is also to destroy the old culture and build the new.
She becomes the head of the army's cultural work and she gets to wear an army uniform. She wears it very smartly with a tight belt around her little waist, but she's already got a very proletariat look with short hair and these glasses.
She is not in the Politburo at this point, but she becomes very quickly a leader in the Cultural Revolution. She is the one who tells the Red Guards that they can beat up bad people. Oh. Her husband said so. Oh. Yeah. She is the one using all of her drama...
can speak to young people and whip them into a frenzy, which her husband does a very good job of as well. And he's really the main one who's doing that. But she's finding her feet. She's finding a purpose. And she gathers around her a number of composers and actors and directors. And they set about changing the culture because now
She has the power and the permission to do this. So all of her work on what she calls revolutionary model operas, they're not actually operas in Chinese. It's performances or stage performances, xi, yangban xi. And the idea is that they are models in the sense that you have industrial models. They are the thing from which everything can be copied, right?
And you stay with those specifications. So in her revolutionary model operas, the size of the patches on the peasant's uniform, the color of the greenish tinged makeup of the bad guys, the way that rosy light always fell on the heroes, all of that was part of her design for a new culture. These things are quite kitsch, but they're really riveting. They tell simple stories,
about revolution, about the need to overthrow the bad, the corrupt, the bandits, for the people to be the heroes. She said, and this is very influential, she said, you know, the stage in China has always been dominated by the emperors and the beauties and the scholars. And now it is the workers, the peasants and the soldiers who will be the heroes. I'll be back with Linda after this short break.
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Were these shows popular? They were popular and they were everywhere. They became less popular as there was nothing else to see. Yeah, that'll do it. At one point later on, there was a decree that there should be a little bit more...
flexibility and you could have local dialects and maybe a little bit of, you know, people could use their creativity to create things that weren't exactly following these models. There were eight to 11 major revolutionary model operas. And I mean, that included a symphony, it included ballets, it included different kinds of performances. But there
But when the people themselves started to make their own works with great names like, you know, the bourgeois dictatorship must be overthrown. I mean, we're not talking about wild experimentation. It's not subtle, is it? No, it's not subtle and it's not liberal in any other sense. She was like, oh my God, they're saying revolutionary words, but they might as well be naked on the stage. Yeah.
She was very tested by any kind of deviation. As the Cultural Revolution began to take off, very quickly it became very violent. The first victims were teachers and principals. Teachers? Yes. Why teachers? Okay, so...
Mao had said that education shouldn't be just in the classroom. You have to go out and the students should be in the factories and the fields learning from the peasants and the workers. A lot of teachers dragged their feet over that one. The teachers should also be out in the fields. That was part of it. Part of it was that he told the young people that they were the future of the revolution. They were the key. They were the revolutionary successors and they needed to rebel against authority and what authorities did.
are around students, they're the teachers. The teachers, yeah. The teachers were of course blamed with holding back this revolutionary tide. It's a complex story. But when Jiang Qing comes in, she put herself out there. She was somebody who communicated with the students. Now, there were very, very violent scenes of persecution. Obviously, Mao's major enemies within the party were all subject to that as well. The Cultural Revolution eventually
became a movement of mass killing. So that in the countryside, you would have people killing entire families just because they belong to the wrong class. It was brutal, unceasingly violent. It's awful. I know. And while the masses were going on with all this stuff, massacres
Mao was getting rid of his enemies and Jiang Qing was using her power to target her enemies. So Zhao Dan, remember the dishy actor? I do remember him. Yes. He went to prison and had terrible, terrible treatment in prison. He was very badly abused.
Other enemies, there was a woman who once got an actress in Shanghai who got one of the roles that she coveted and that person became a victim. These aren't political enemies. These are just people that have pissed her off over the years. This is insane. It was a time of total insanity. It was a time of such difficulty and pain and suffering. So painful.
As the late 60s went on, Mao's roving eye, you know, he and Zhang Qing were basically comrades and he had a lot of young women who were his train attendants, attendants on his special train and this and that. Dancing partners, all that sort of thing.
And she became quite obsessed with extreme radical politics, even in the Cultural Revolution, even among the people who were in power, there were different factions. And she was the leader of the most radical faction. Mao would play one faction against the other. And he would give her a
ability to do things and then he would put her down. He kept people constantly on edge and she was one of the people he kept on edge. He was the person who coined the phrase, the gang of four. He said of her and her three closest cronies, they were acting like a gang of four, going behind his back and using his name to justify all the things that they were doing.
She survived all of this criticism. She was distant from him in the later years, but that was, you know, as a wife. But when he was dying, she kind of stepped in and reasserted herself. After he died, she apparently told other leaders that, in fact, she had been the one who had authored his later works. Wow.
Wow. Okay. And that they needed to study them. And she was clearly making a,
to be the person who would be the natural, the next leader of China. Now, there were a lot of people who didn't like her. I bet there were. Oh, yeah. And they didn't trust her. And there was word that she and her fellows were planning a coup. So about one month after, in the month after Mao died, Mao died in September 1976. In October 1976, Mao,
several top leaders conspired very secretly and they arrested all the members of the Gang of Four, including Jiang Qing. Immediately, there was this huge...
propaganda thing against the Gang of Four. And people responded to that like they had not responded to a lot of propaganda for a long time. And the thing is, is that you already could see that coming one year before Mao was ill.
The premier, Zhou Enlai, who had been seen by the people as a moderating force in the Cultural Revolution, whether or not it's true is a subject of controversy and debate, but Zhou Enlai was much loved by the people. He died in early 1975.
Jiang Qing, who hated Zhou Enlai, forbid people to mourn with black armbands and wreaths and so on. And they were so furious, they poured into Tiananmen Square, among other places, and mourned Zhou Enlai and grieved.
read poetry that was so obviously against Jiang Qing, calling her the white bone demon. They talked about the white bone demon. They didn't say it was Jiang Qing. Everybody knew who it was. That is an evil spirit from a Ming Dynasty novel. Wow.
I mean, it kind of sounds like it's deserved, though. I've got to be honest, she hasn't come off well during this podcast. She sounds like quite a nasty person. She was nasty and she was megalomaniac and mythomaniac. Yeah, maybe nasty wasn't strong enough, actually. But she's quite...
She's quite fascinating. She allowed an American, fairly naive American journalist scholar Roxanne Witke into her circle. And she wrote a biography called Comrade Jiang Qing.
spent years with her, spent a long time with her, and described moments where, for example, she was sitting, pressing orchids next to a goldfish pond. You know, it was this kind of, she was very complex. She wanted to be very, she impressed Imelda Marcos on a state visit in the 1970s as being very feminine and soft-spoken. She was always submissive to Mao. She was always,
a bit afraid of Mao, I think. She was somebody who grew up in domestic violence. She made it on her own in Shanghai, a tough city. She joined the communists. There were things about her that were very strong. The biography puts too much of a feminist slant on this. I don't think
Yeah. Feminism was her main driver. She did a lot of bad things to a lot of women. Not much sisterhood there. But she certainly was a woman who perhaps in other circumstances would have had other opportunities. I don't know. I'm not very sympathetic. Yeah, maybe. But I think we have to look at her as a complex personality. When she was put on trial in 1981, she famously defied the judges, calling them fascists.
And she said, I was Mao's dog. I bit who he told me to bite. Wow. So no, no remorse, no apologies for this. She's just defiant to the end. Defiant to the end. And 10 years. So she was sentenced to death with a two year reprieve and then they communed it to life.
Ten years later, 1991, she's suffering from cancer. She had always been of ill health. For a long time, she had suffered from many different things. In the 1950s, she did have a cancer. She suffered a number of different physical ailments. It's hard to say how much became hypochondria. Mao's doctor in his famous memoir really didn't like Jiang Qing and felt she was a hypochondriac. But she
She certainly had various health issues. 1991, she has definitely got cancer. She's got it bad. She commits suicide in her cell, leaves a note basically saying, my teacher, Mao, I'm coming. I'm joining you. Wow. But also not forgetting to rag on her enemies as well at the same time. A little postscript? Yes.
So she was really hated. I spent a lot of time in China in the 1980s and boy, did people hate her. Boy, did they love to tell stories about her. And it wasn't just Zhao Dan's widow. Everyone, people really despised her. And when she was buried, I mean, I don't think anybody would have thought to go and pay tribute to her grave.
Xi Jinping in 2018, the same year that he allowed himself to have an indefinite number of terms, breaking the two-term rule that the post-Mao leadership had set up, that very same year, people were allowed to visit her grave. We've seen resurgent Maoism because people are like, well, in Mao's era, they don't understand it well because history is not taught properly in China.
It's very heavily censored. People have an idealized vision of the Mao era. Even the Cultural Revolution is a time of purity, no corruption. It was certainly better for social welfare in terms of the system, not necessarily in terms of the delivery. But today, people don't necessarily have health care. The systems are a mess. People don't feel supported. So there is this resurgent feeling about
Mao era that perhaps we need to get back to some of that. Oh, God. I know. Jiang Qing has been a beneficiary of this. So people have gone and visited her grave. As a final question then, Linda, and you've been incredible to talk to and fleshing out this...
what you'd have to politely refer to as complex woman. What legacy do you think that she has left today? Oh, that is a good question. Okay, here is one of the unfortunate parts of her legacy. Her story almost immediately after the Cultural Revolution was instantly used or weaponized as yet another cautionary tale about the dangers of giving women power.
China has only had several women who have ruled. Only one in her own name, Empress Wu of the Tang Dynasty. And Jiang Qing actually liked Empress Wu so much and admired her so much. Empress Wu was actually a very interesting character, really complex and very capable. But Jiang
Jiang Qing, when Imelda Marcos was coming to visit, originally wanted to dress up as Empress Wu. And she apparently had some costumes made, but was told that that would not be a good look. I wonder why. But Empress Wu is constantly dragged up as this, you know, as a cautionary tale of what happens when women get power. There's three women and
There were movies made right after the Cultural Revolution, those early years, movies about some of these women that were obviously all about Jiang Qing. So that's an unfortunate part of her legacy. And it must be said that there is no woman...
on the Politburo Standing Committee, which is the important thing. There has never been a woman on the Politburo Standing Committee. And Jiang Qing, sadly, probably reinforced a lot of patriarchal attitudes towards women that were existing in China. Their sayings about women in power, that's as natural as a chicken crowing. Yeah.
As opposed to a rooster, you know. Yeah. Part of her legacy is that very unfortunate death
reinforcement of that traditional belief. Another legacy, though, is these operas, is these strange things which still have appeal. People still watch them. And I have seen several of them several times. They are fun. Oh, really? I know it's horrible. I know it's horrible. It's like...
I know I shouldn't say that because my ex-husband, Jeremy Barme, who's one of the greatest sinologists alive, calls that sort of thing the Muzak of the Chinese Holocaust. Oh my God. Right. Oh, wow. Not pulling any punches there. Okay. No, he's not. Yeah, he doesn't. But if you watch, for example, Taking Tiger Mountain by Strategy...
which is a great story about defeating these bandits who've been terrorizing the common people. It is enjoyable. It is fun. If you watch the red detachment of women with these ballerinas with their guns leaping in the air.
You know, I have friends who grew up during that time and say that in such a puritanical time when people were supposed to be completely asexual women, she contributed very much to the idea of a strong women as an ideal of beauty being combined with strength. And you see these heroines in these operas who are strong, physically strong, and they are mentally strong.
And there's something about that that's very appealing. Also in Red Detachment of Women, they were wearing shorts and you could never see women's legs.
I have several male friends who say that that was the source of their fantasies, of their dreams. Wow. Okay. That that was just unbelievable. So, you know, she was many things to many people. She was an example of the bad power of women. She was somebody who created these operas, these cultural artifacts that are still alive.
I have to say, enjoyed by many people in China today, some for their kitsch value and others for nostalgic reasons, because that was the music. That was the entertainment of their childhood, you know, for people who grew up on Beyonce. When they're older, they're going to look back at Beyonce. They're going to look back at whatever was part of your youth is going to be something you look back on nostalgia. And she helped create those things for better or worse. Wow.
Linda, you have been marvellous to talk to. You've been absolutely fascinating. And if people want to know more about you and your work, where can they find you? I do have a website. So it's www.lindajaven.com.au. And my new book, Bombard the Headquarters, China's Cultural Revolution is available.
coming out in April in the UK. So exciting. Thank you so much for talking to us today about this very complex woman. You've been wonderful. Oh, thank you, Kate. It's been so much fun. Thank you for listening. And thank you so much to Linda for joining me. And if you like what you heard, don't forget to like, review and follow along wherever it is you get your podcasts. I know everybody says that, but it does actually help us quite a lot.
If you'd like us to explore a subject or maybe you just fancied saying hi, then you can email us at betwixt at historyhit.com. We've got episodes on the truly horrible history of gonorrhoea and the first episode in a new mini-series of the History of Fuckboys, starting with the fuckiest of all the fuckboys, Lord Byron.
This podcast was edited by Tom DeLarge and produced by Stuart Beckwith. The senior producer was Charlotte Long. Join me again betwixt the sheets, the history of sex scandal in society, a podcast by History Hit. This podcast contains music from Epidemic Sound. Work management platforms, endless onboarding, IT bottlenecks, admin requests. But what if things were different? We found love.
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