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Mao Zedong
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Mao Zedong ranks among the most consequential political figures of the twentieth century, making him a frequent subject in history, political science, international relations, and Asian studies courses. As the founding leader of the People's Republic of China, he oversaw revolutionary transformation, radical social restructuring, and policies whose effects shaped modern China and global Cold War dynamics. His leadership invites serious academic scrutiny because it combines ideological vision, mass mobilization, and authoritarian control in ways that challenge simple moral or political categorization. Works like Jung Chang's Wild Swans: Three Daughters of China offer personal and critical perspectives that complement more structural historical analyses, giving students multiple entry points into his legacy.

Student papers on Mao tend to approach him from several distinct angles. Biographical and evaluative essays weigh whether he should be understood as a hero or villain of the Chinese revolution. Comparative analyses place him alongside leaders such as Stalin and Ho Chi Minh to examine patterns of populist, charismatic dictatorship. Thematic papers address specific policies and their consequences, including the Cultural Revolution, China's One Child Policy, gender inequality, and Chinese economic history. Others situate Mao's era within broader geopolitical contexts such as the causes and course of the Korean War.

A strong essay on Mao requires a clearly bounded thesis — evaluating his entire life risks producing a survey rather than an argument, so focusing on a specific policy, period, or comparative question produces sharper analysis. Evidence drawn from political outcomes, social consequences, and primary or literary sources carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating Mao as either purely heroic or purely villainous without engaging the genuine complexity of his ideology and its contradictory results.

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Paper Undergraduate
Real Mao Zedong: The Man
Mao Zedong is both one of the most influential and one of the most controversial figures of the twentieth century. This should not be too surprising; influence often comes with controversy attached.
Paper Undergraduate
Positive effects of globalization on China
In this paper, we are examining the positives and negatives of globalization on China. We then analyze how a solution can be introduce that will address both viewpoints. Once this occurs, is when everyone will see how this is influencing their standing in the world community.
Research Paper Doctorate
Red Azalea Is the Memoir
This paper is a book review of Anchee Min's personal memoir, Red Azalea. Min's memoir appears to be a record of the insanity, fear, and human wickedness that pervaded the Cultural Revolution. During this period bad people found a way to get away with wicked deeds, even gaining society's approval and political advancement from these deeds. More importantly, good people, even those who were strong like Min and Yan, were pressured to give in and do wicked deeds themselves. The numerous personal and political betrayals throughout the book are a metaphor of the wider betrayal of the Chinese people by the ruling Communist Party, who never delivered on its promise of a society without injustice and unfairness.
Research Paper Masters
Chinese Women History and Chinese Culture Revolution
Rae Yang's Outlook on the Chinese Revolution
Paper Undergraduate
U.S. Intelligence and the China Hands: Cold War Failures
This essay examines the experience of the China Hands during and after World War II. This group of diplomats and academics succeeded in forming close bonds with the Communist regime, and recommended that the United States ally with Mao Zedong so as to gain a powerful ally in Asia. However, domestic fears of communism led to these recommendations being discarded, and the China Hands were fired or marginalized for their role is the supposed "loss" of China to communism.
Paper Doctorate
China's WTO Accession: Economic Impact and Market Expansion
On December 11, 2001, China officially became a member of the World Trade Organization (WTO), opening the country's doors to change and a new economy.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Tibet and China the Relationship
The relationship between Tibet and China, despite the various ups and downs seen over the past several centuries, continues to remain fluid. The points-of-view of the Chinese and the Tibetans about the sovereignty of…
Paper Doctorate
Chinese History Hungry Ghosts Often,
Often, world leaders are complex figures of controversy. In the book Hungry Ghosts by Jasper Becker, Chairman Mao is portrayed with notoriety and infamy. This book takes place in China, during the time of leader Mao…
Paper Doctorate
Chinese History Wild Swans Jung
Jung Chang sources the lives of her grandmother, mother, and herself in her book, Wild Swans. Yu-fang is Jung's grandmother born in 1909; De-hong is her mother, born in 1931. This book is banned in Chang's native…
Essay Doctorate
Civil Rights Black Panthers Police
Amidst a country of racism against African-Americans, it became inevitable that groups of colored citizens would band together to carry out what police thought to be one of the biggest threats in national security in…