Bővebb ismertető
IntroductionMore than ten years have passed since Mao Tse-tung and his group openly embarked upon their "special course" aimed at undermining the world communist, working class and national liberation movement. Chauvinism and a desire to achieve hegemony have become the guidelines of this group both in their activity at home and in the international arena.The domestic and foreign policy of the Maoist group is imbued with a desire to revise the Marxist-Leninist principles of socialist construction. It is worth noting that in the first decade after the founding of the People's Republic of China the Communist Party of China followed the Marxist-Leninist teachings, whose basic principles were reflected in the decisions of its 8th Congress (1956).The question arises: what is Maoism from the point of view dt ideology and theory?The political, economic, philosophical and sociological views and the tactical approach of Mao Tse-tung and his followers reflect the influence and are in fact an eclectic mixture of various doctrines, theories and concepts including feudal Chinese philosophy (mostly Confucianism and Taoism), petty-bourgeois socialism, petty-bourgeois and peasant views, bourgeois-nationalist views, great-power chauvinism, Trotskyite and anarchistic ideas.It was through the prism of these views that Mao