Prototypes before 1949 Dazibao have been used in China since imperial times, but became more common when literacy rates rose after the 1911
Xinhai Revolution. They have also incorporated limited-circulation newspapers, excerpted press articles, and pamphlets intended for public display. Big-character posters can be seen as part of a long tradition of using writings to convey information and express dissent in public. Wall posters have been used in China to publicly announce royal edicts, pronouncements, and various orders since at least the
Zhou dynasty (1046 BC – 771 BC), when posters were the only means of communication between the emperor and his people. Local governments also used such posters, for instance to announce news or describe the physiognomy of wanted criminals. Documentation of posters used to express political dissent can be found as early as the
Han dynasty. Around 172 AD, a poster attacking the powerful eunuchs appeared on the gate of the Imperial Palace. In the
Republic of China, increased popular literacy enabled a more effective use of public posters as a form of political propaganda. Posters and other forms of public writings were frequently employed to express nationalist sentiment. During the
May Fourth Movement in 1919, Peking University students were enraged by the
Treaty of Versailles, which handed
German-occupied territory in China to Japan after
World War I and decided to hold a rally in protest. "Inflammatory notices" on the campus bulletin board announced their plan. When
Sun Yat-sen died in 1925, and during the lying-in-state held in Central Park in Beijing, people spontaneously hung thousands of funeral scrolls around the park, which were often inscribed with a couplet expressing their grief and respect for the leader of the
Xinhai revolution. Posters were also used extensively in 1925 during the
May 30th Movement, for instance in urging patriotic citizens to stop using foreign products. At the time,
the Kuomintang (KMT, or the Chinese Nationalist Party) used slogans and posters in their political propaganda. Some early posters share the visual aesthetics of later big-character posters. For instance, a poster printed by the Political Department of the General Headquarters of the National Revolutionary Army led by KMT is dominated by big characters written in the center. The sentence read: "If the peasants want to plough their fields, they must help the revolutionary army." Compared to contemporary designs, which were often more flamboyant and distracting, this poster has a simple grotesque-style border that directs the reader's attention to the words. Although the poster was printed, the characters appear as forceful handwritings that convey a heightened sense of immediacy.
Big-character posters in the Yan'an period Inspired by
the Soviet Union,
the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) also used wall newspapers and posters in their propaganda campaign, as they could be easily produced and reproduced and were written in accessible language conducive to mass mobilization. It was commonly believed that big-character posters originated in
Yan'an, the CCP headquarter during the
Anti-Japanese War and the subsequent
civil war. They not only disseminated news and communist ideas but were also used to purge party officials during
the 1942 Rectification Movement. However, occasionally, though rarely, people also used big-character posters to criticize the CCP. On March 23, 1942,
Wang Shiwei, a 36-year-old pro-Communist journalist and writer, posted an essay titled "Two Reflections". Written in large characters, the essay criticized certain party leaders for repressing forms of political dissent. In the next week, several other posters similarly critical of the party also went up, which triggered intense debate among the party leadership. In 1945, during
The 7th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party,
Mao Zedong reflected on Wang's big-character poster: "We were defeated by him. We acknowledged our defeat and worked hard at rectification." In 1957, when Mao Zedong had started to use big-character posters to mobilize the masses during
the Hundred Flowers Campaign, he looked back to the Yan'an period in his talk at the supreme state conference: "A few big-character posters were written in the Yan'an period, but we didn't promote it. Why? I guess maybe we were a bit foolish back then."
1950s: Big-character posters in the Hundred Flowers Campaign and the Great Leap Forward In late 1956,
Mao Zedong believed that internal contradictions within the socialist society and within the party leadership, such as issues of subjectivism, bureaucratism, and secretarianism, must be solved before they develop into serious antagonism that requires more violent and radical measures. To expose these contradictions, Mao was determined to create an open atmosphere in which people may freely air any constructive advice. In February 1957, he launched
the Hundred Flowers Campaign, which attempted to mobilize the masses, especially non-party intellectuals, to voice their concerns and contend with each other. However, as criticism started to target Mao's judgment and question whether China should be led by CCP and whether China should adopt the socialist path, Mao decided that it was enough. On May 15, 1957, he wrote an article "Things are starting to change", which was immediately passed around party cadres but not yet made public. In the article, Mao insisted that "In recent days the Rightists in the democratic parties and institutions of higher education have shown themselves to be most determined and most rabid... To date, the Rightists have yet to reach the climax of their attack, and they are going at it in high spirits... We shall let the Rightists run amuck for a time and let them reach their climax. The more they run amuck, the better for us... Why is such a torrent of reactionary, vicious statements being allowed to appear in the press? To let the people have some idea of these poisonous weeds and noxious fumes so as to have them uprooted or dispelled." The first critical big-character poster was posted on May 19, 1957, on the walls of the dining hall of
Peking University, after Mao made up his mind that all those criticizing the party would be encouraged to speak up only to be eliminated later. This first poster was not exceptionally radical. It questioned how representatives to
the National Congress of Youth League were selected and implied that the responsible cadres were nepotistic. 500 more posters followed in the next three days, and the number continued to grow. One poster by Long Yinghua from the philosophy department suggested that a section of the university wall should be designated as a forum for such democratic discussion, and hence the Democracy Wall was born in Peking University. Some of the more radical posters questioned the primacy and legitimacy of CCP and demanded absolute democracy. Liu Qidi's poster "Hu Feng is certainly not a counter-revolutionary" challenged the accusations of the intellectual
Hu Feng three years ago in an earlier rectification campaign, which essentially questioned the judgment of Mao and CCP. Most party media were silent about the student movement. "The Democracy Wall in Peking University", written by Liu Guanghua from
Wenhui Daily, was one of the few articles sympathetic towards it. Some posters quoted in his article had evident "anti-party" and "anti-socialism" sentiment. Liu's essay encouraged nationwide writing of big-character posters, which started to appear in universities in Nanjing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, etc. This first wave of big-character posters was not welcomed by university party cadres. For instance, Cui Xiongkun, the deputy secretary of CCP in Peking University, stated: "big-character is not the best practice." Party authorities urged students to stop posting, which only generated more posters denouncing their restriction of freedom of expression. The Peking University Party Committee eventually gave consent to the posting of big-character posters. Factory workers in
the Hundred Flowers Campaign also used big-character posters to criticize bureaucratism in the running of factories. For instance, in 1956, Li Lesheng, a deputy chairman of a trade union, wrote a big-character poster against local party secretary Deng Song, whose policies were not welcomed by workers and other trade-union cadres. The student unrest became the last straw for Mao Zedong, who was already impatient with the radical criticism aired by non-party intellectuals. In the first week of June 1957, Mao launched the
Anti-Rightist Campaign. Those critical of the party or the government were labeled "rightists" or "capitalist-roaders" and were punished for attempting to sabotage the dictatorship of the proletariat. Their use of big-character posters was also condemned. On June 14, ''People's Daily
criticized Wenhui Daily'
s sympathetic coverage of big-character posters. On July 1, People's Daily'' called the Wenhui Daily editorial team a "rightist system" and characterized big-character poster as an evil weapon used by rightists against the party. Big-character posters critical of Mao or CCP soon vanished. While the content of this first wave of big-character posters irritated
Mao Zedong, he was impressed by the medium's effectiveness in engaging the masses, and he decided to adopt it for his political goals. In June 1957, Mao already observed: "According to Beijing's experience, posting dazibao in party organs and universities can, first, expose faults such as bureaucratism; secondly, expose those who have reactionary or incorrect thoughts; thirdly, train party members and those still in the middle." In July 1957, Mao further redefined big-character posters as "a revolutionary form that is beneficial to the proletarian and not to the bourgeoise". He reasoned that "the fear of big-character poster is unfounded", since it would only "expose and solve contradictions and help people make progress." Big-character posters were coopted by the party as a useful weapon against the rightists, many of whom were arrested for posting critical posters. During
the Anti-Rightist Campaign, out of the 500,000 people designated as rightists, many were exposed and condemned by big-character posters. Local party organizations also tried to engage the public in the writing of big-character posters against class enemies. At first, people were unmotivated, fearing that their writings would be used against them in the future. In October 1957, Mao wrote another essay, "Be activists in promoting the revolution," which established the legitimacy of big-character posters as a form of mass struggle. He described big-character posters as "the most suitable for the masses to take the initiatives and to raise their responsibility...as they fully exercise socialist democracy." In the same month, official media such as ''People's Daily and Beijing Daily'' started promoting big-character posters. In an attempt to mobilize the writing of big-character posters in factories, leading party cadres including
Mao Zedong,
Liu Shaoqi,
Zhou Enlai, and
Zhu De all went to different Beijing factories to read big-character posters. With such explicit encouragement, big-character posters finally flourished in every major Chinese city. In a factory in Beijing, 110,000 big-character posters were posted within two weeks. In Shanghai, a work unit of only 32000 employees produced 40,000 posters in August 1957. In Tianjin, 300,000 big-character posters were written in only twenty days. Between late October and mid-November, 5,000 posters appeared in Chengdu Industrial College. Not all of the posters were critical, as some simply praised the governance of CCP. In some places, the writing of posters were highly organized, with an editorial board, a production center, a distribution center, and even a correspondent network. According to official media, big-character posters were effective not only in raising but also in solving problems. Issues that had remained for years were immediately solved once brought to public attention in big-character posters. However, the content and form of big-character posters were closely monitored by the party and nothing that could jeopardize its authority would be published. According to PRC legal scholar Hua Sheng, big-character posters were at most a token of free expression which gave the public an illusion of participation. In April 1958, he advised that big-character poster could be used "wherever the masses congregate. Wherever it has been widely used, people should continue using it." Posters appeared in party organs and administrative offices, revealing instances of corruption and waste. Universities remained centers of producing big-character posters. Students frequently attacked their professors for valuing professionalism more than political consciousness. Many professors, who didn't write any poster in previous campaigns, started reading and writing big-character posters, mostly as a means of self-criticism. Big-character posters were also mobilized against "bourgeoise individualist behavior," which was essentially any demand for academic independence, personal freedom, individual economic benefit, etc. During
the Great Leap Forward, big-character posters were also used in rural villages to rectify the operation of
People's Communes and to promote production. Many news articles claimed that big-character posters had motivated farmers and contributed to an increase in production. For instance, more rice seedlings were allegedly transplanted after the posting of big-character posters in the Jingxi County in Guangxi. People also wrote big-character posters to support China's sovereignty. When the US navy moved into the
Taiwan Strait in 1958, numerous big-character posters were produced in support of
Zhou Enlai's declaration on September 4 that no foreign aircraft or military vessels may enter China's territorial sky and waters without permission. According to ''People's Daily'', hundreds and thousands of posters were produced by students from the Beijing No.4 High School within 10 minutes of the airing of the declaration. An unbelievable number of big-character posters were allegedly produced during
the Great Leap Forward. For instance, in the anti-waste and anti-conservatism campaign, 90,000 big-character posters appeared in Peking University in a day. According to
Wenhui Daily, teachers from Shanghai's Xuhui District produced 800,000 big-character posters between February 24 and February 26, 1958. Shanghai claimed that in 1958 it created a total of a billion big-character posters. This emphasis on quantity was a general tendency shared across all production units and industries during
the Great Leap Froward. The enthusiasm of writing was unsustainable once every issue had been discussed and every problem had been exposed after a period of fervent posting. To maintain their production, societies of big-character posters were set up in different party institutions to organize the posting and discussion of big-character posters. Nevertheless, the writing of big-character posters declined in the early 1960s.
Big-Character posters during the Cultural Revolution Big-Character posters were among the "four bigs," political instruments which the masses used widely during the Cultural Revolution. The other three referred to great airing of opinions (
daming), great freedom (
dafang), and great debate (
dabianlung). These seven people had many reasons to write this poster, one of them being their personal grudge against two of the principal targets, Song Shuo and Lu Ping. In 1964, during
the Socialist Education Movement,
Lu Ping, President of Peking University and Secretary of the University Party Committee, was criticized by leftist activists as a capitalist. However, when the campaign started to go out of control,
Peng Zhen, First Secretary of the Beijing Municipal Committee and Major of Beijing, intervened and sent a work item that included his Deputy Secretary
Deng Tuo to Peking University to restore order. In March 1965,
Deng Xiaoping also stepped in and reinstalled Lu Ping. They easily found something to attack. Since September 1961,
Deng Tuo, Wu Han (deputy mayor of Beijing), and Liao Mosha (Head of the Beijing United Front Work Department) co-authored the column "Sanjiacun Zhaji" (Three-Family Village Reading Notes) on the party magazine
Qianxian (Frontline). The 67 published essays included some veiled criticism against Mao. In May 1966, under the direction of
Jiang Qing, three articles were published on
Jiefang Daily and
Guangming Daily against the column, which was characterized as an "anti-party, anti-socialism big poisonous weed" that intended to overthrow the dictatorship of the proletariat and restore capitalism in China. While the entire country was agitated against the column and its writers, Peking University did not support their blind criticism. On May 14, 1966, Lu Ping repeated Song Shuo's (vice-president of the Beijing Municipal Committee's University Department) word, who demanded that the party organization in the university "strengthen their leadership and hold their post" to lead the agitated masses to "the correct path". They insisted that the refutation of anti-party and anti-socialist rhetoric should happen on the theoretical level and must rely on reasoning. Instead of posting big-character posters, they encouraged people to lead small group discussions and write small-character posters (
xiaozibao) and critical essays, since big plenary sessions could not lead to a profound and specific revolution. Nie et al. found fault with Lu Ping and Song Shuo's attempt at limiting the form and scope of the masses' political participation. Their big-character poster She thus had no reason to turn Nie Yuanzi down. At two o'clock in the afternoon, the poster was put up on the eastern wall of the university's canteen. In less than half a day, the campus was covered by big-character posters. According to a witness account, those who supported the poster and those who opposed it were evenly balanced. Allegedly, Lu Ping also engaged his supporters to write big-character posters that denounced Nie Yuanzi's action as an "opposition to the Party Central Committee." Vice President Huang Yiran urged Nie to remove the poster, but Nie refused.
Mao Zedong was not in Beijing at the time.
Liu Shaoqi and other leaders tried to control the movement by issuing an eight-point directive restricting the posting of big-character posters, yet the guidelines were not strictly followed by the students. On May 25,
Li Xuefeng, the newly appointed First Secretary of Beijing, visited Peking University at midnight and exhorted students and party members that they must "struggle in an orderly way instead of scrambling everything up."
Zhou Enlai also sent Zhang Yan, deputy director of the State Council's Foreign Affairs Office, to caution the students that since foreign students were present on campus, they should refrain from putting up big-character posters in public space. After meeting with the Central Committee,
Liu Shaoqi,
Zhou Enlai, and
Deng Xiaoping decided to send down work teams to various universities to further control the movement, and Mao Zedong initially approved their decision. Mao read it on June 1 and wrote an instruction: "This text could be published by the Xinhua News Agency in all the national journals and magazines. It is absolutely necessary. Now we can smash the reactionary stronghold that is Peking University. Do so as soon as possible! The big-character poster from Peking University is a Marxist-Leninist big-character poster. It must be immediately broadcast and immediately published." On June 2, ''People's Daily'' reprinted the poster in its entirety, together with
Chen Boda's article "Hail Peking University's Big-Character Poster." Chen supported the main ideas proposed in the Peking poster and further criticized Lu Ping, Song Shuo, and Peng Peiyun as reactionary, anti-party, and anti-socialist. He also insisted that every proletarian revolutionary must follow CCP's discipline and unconditionally accept the leadership of the Central Committee. The national reproduction of Nie et al.'s big-character poster immediately activated students. Between June 1 and June 6, more than 50,000 big-character posters were posted in Peking University, and 65,000 posters appeared in Tsinghua University. In the Post and Telecommunications Sector in Beijing, each person on average wrote more than 7 big-character posters in June, 1966. This first wave of writing mainly targeted school leaders and party committee members who previously did not support students' posting of big-character posters. More people went to the universities to read big-character posters, and many middle school students went to learn how to write a big-character poster. According to the celebrated Chinese writer
Ji Xianlin, "every day hundreds of thousands of people came...in addition to people, the walls, the ground, and the trees were covered by big and small character posters, and they all have the same content, supporting the first Marxist-Leninist big-character poster." The press continued to celebrate big-character poster. On June 21, ''People's Daily'' published "Revolutionary Big Character Posters are the Demon-Detectors to Expose All Ox-Demons and Snake- Spirits," which characterized big-character poster as an effective weapon against "ex-demons and snake-spirits" and asserted that all true revolutionaries must welcome big-character posters and anyone who suppressed its writing and posting was a counter-revolutionary conservative. At the time, the work teams initially sent by Deng Xiaoping, Liu Shaoqi, and Zhou Enlai were still in the universities, and the tension between work teams and student activists escalated. Though work teams seemingly encouraged students to criticize bourgeois or revisionist teachers, they were given the mandate to monitor the most outspoken teachers and students, and unorganized and unsupervised accusations and struggles against individual teachers and cadres were criticized. The students, who assumed that the work teams should support all their revolutionary effort, became dissatisfied with the imposed restrictions and wrote big-character posters against the work teams. In late July, Mao Zedong intervened. He insisted that those who wrote big-character posters should not be arrested, even if they wrote reactionary slogans. He urged all cadres to go to Peking University to read big-character posters and encourage the students. On July 24, Mao finally ordered all work teams to withdraw from colleges and middle schools. The central target of Nie et al.'s poster,
Lu Ping, was eventually dismissed. The entire Peking University Party Committee was reorganized, and
Nie Yuanzi became an important member of the new committee. Yet
Mao Zedong was dissatisfied, as he launched a more severe criticism against Liu Shaoqi and the work teams and alleged that all those who failed to support the student movement should be dealt with. Mao Zedong was determined to remove Liu Shaoqi from his position. On August 5, he wrote "
Bombard the headquarters—my big-character poster", which was distributed to the plenum two days later. Strictly speaking, this was not a big-character poster, as it was never actually mounted on a wall but draught down on an old
Beijing Daily. Perhaps Mao intentionally appropriated the name to borrow its spontaneous and rebellious connotation. Though the poster only vaguely targeted "some leading comrades" who had "enforced a bourgeois dictatorship and struck down the surging movement of the great Cultural Revolution of the proletariat", everyone at the time knew that the person under attack was Liu Shaoqi. This was the first time that Mao Zedong's profound disagreement with Liu Shaoqi was made public, and students quickly picked up the signal. On August 22, 1966, the first poster against Liu Shaoqi appeared, in which a Tsinghua University student attacked Liu Shaoqi for being oppositional to Mao Zedong thought. Millions more similar big-character posters were posted in Beijing in the next several months. Mao Zedong was ambivalent about such public opposition against Liu Shaoqi. Although Mao wanted to eliminate Liu as a powerful political rival, he still treated this problem as internal to the party. On October 24 and 25, he stated that it was not good to post big-character posters against Liu Shaoqi and Deng Xiaoping on the streets, as they should not be completely stricken down. However, the situation was impossible to control, and big-character posters against Liu Shaoqi still appeared in the public. The eleventh Plenum not only effectively removed Liu from his position, but the "Sixteen Directives" was also ratified at the Plenum, the fourth directive of which encouraged the masses to "make fullest use of big-character posters." The official endorsement of big-character posters triggered widespread fervor. Millions of people wrote big-character posters, which could be found almost everywhere in the nation, from urban cities to rural villages, from university campuses to factories, from government offices to the streets. In Changsha, the walls of the grey buildings along the main streets were colored white by paper. After the
Red Guards went to the country to "integrate with the masses", workers and peasants also started to write big-character posters. In Shanghai, in the propaganda sector alone, around 88,000 big-character posters attacked more than 1300 people by June 18. Even foreign experts were influenced by the atmosphere and wrote big-character posters to complain about their privileged treatment and lack of political participation. The movement quickly went into chaos. On October 25, 1966, Mao Zedong himself described the publishing of Nie Yuanzi's big-character poster and his writing of a big-character poster as a "mistake", but he still believed that the chaos was necessary to bring people's attention to the critical issue. In November and December 1966, more senior party leaders were criticized, including
Deng Xiaoping,
Zhu De, and
Zhou Enlai. This aimless wave of attack was labeled the "evil wind of November and December."
"On Socialist democracy and the legal system" (1974) In the mid-1970s, big-character posters critical of
the Cultural Revolution and
Mao Zedong began to emerge, the most famous one of which was "On Socialist democracy and the legal system," a 20,000-word poster written on 64 large pieces of paper, posted on a busy downtown street in Guangzhou in November 1974. It was written by Li Zhengtian, a student from the Guangzhou Art Academy, Chen Yiyang, a high-school student, and
Wang Xizhe, a worker, under the collective pseudonym Li-Yi-Zhe. It began with a nominal celebration of some positive aspects of the Cultural Revolution but quickly went on to criticize the concurrent lack of democracy and a robust legal system. It called the situation "a rehearsal for socialist-fascism in our country", with Lin Biao "the rehearsal's chief director." In the end, the poster called for democracy, socialist legality, and revolutionary and personal rights. The poster found a sympathetic audience, but the central authority urged the Guangzhou Revolutionary Committee to denounce the poster. What the party found especially threatening was its implicit rejection of a privileged party stratum that would rule above the people. The Party Committee of Guangdong Province labeled the poster "a counter-revolutionary big-character poster," and called its writers part of "a counter-revolutionary clique." Perhaps Li-Yi-Zhe's call for socialist legality did strike a chord, as in 1975,
the first Constitution of the People's Republic of China was formulated. The right to put up big-character posters was listed as one of the "Four Great Freedoms." Article 13 states that the right to use big-character posters in political movements was protected by the state, as long as they "help consolidate the leadership of the Communist Party of China over the state and consolidate the dictatorship of the proletariat."
Big-character posters used against the Gang of Four Throughout
the Cultural Revolution, some big-character posters were used against
the Gang of Four. In 1970, during the
One Strike-Three Anti Campaign, local authorities were unclear about who they should attack, and sometimes even
Jiang Qing was criticized as a revisionist. In 1976, when
the Gang of Four decided to go against the newly reinstated
Deng Xiaoping, they encountered strong resistance. In Sichuan, Deng's home province, big-character posters praised Deng Xiaoping and questioned the motivation of the Gang of Four. After the death of
Zhou Enlai, in the
April 5 Tiananmen Incident, many big-character posters attacked the Gang of Four.
Big-character posters in the 1980s The writing of big-character posters continued after
the Cultural Revolution. As
Deng Xiaoping gradually ascended to power, he was initially tolerant of big-character posters or the public expression of political dissent. On November 27, 1978, he said: "[The presence of big-character poster] is a normal phenomenon and an indication of stability in our country. Writing big-character posters is permitted by our constitution. We have no right to deny [the masses] this right or criticize them for promoting democracy by putting up big-character posters. If the masses feel some anger, we must let them express it." The right to write big-character posters, along with the other "Four Great Freedoms", was kept in
the 1978 Constitution. In Chapter 3, "The Fundamental Rights and Duties of Citizens", Article 45 reinstates: "Citizens enjoy freedom of speech, correspondence, the press, assembly, association, procession, demonstration and the freedom to strike, and have the right to "speak out freely, air their views fully, hold great debates and write big-character posters." However, compared to the 1975 version, the emphasis on their use for "socialist revolution" was removed.
Ye Jianying commented on the revision, insisting that these rights remained dependent upon one's compliance with the socialist system and CCP's leadership and that this right was only granted to ensure democracy under the leadership of the proletariat. Between 1978 and 1979, big-character posters posted on
the Xidan Democracy Wall stirred national attention and controversy. The Xidan Democracy Wall was a brick wall in Xidan, a shopping district in Beijing at the intersection of West Chang'an Street and Xidan North Street. After 1976, although
the Cultural Revolution was criticized, Mao Zedong's reputation in general and the CCP's fundamental authority were deemed unquestionable by the new regime, which caused some discontent among those who suffered during the past ten years. In addition, the government failed to promptly address every victim's request for official rehabilitation and reparation. Thousands of people traveled to Beijing to petition for their cases to be reevaluated, and many publicized their sufferings in the form of big-character posters. If the first few posters only retold personal stories, the content of big-character posters soon became bolder, and some began to attack
the Cultural Revolution, the
Gang of Four,
Mao Zedong, and finally
Deng Xiaoping. One of the most famous was "
The Fifth Modernization", whose bold call for democracy brought instant fame to its author,
Wei Jingsheng. On December 5, 1978,
Wei Jingsheng, a 28-year-old electrician at the Beijing Zoo, put up his big-character poster on the Democracy Wall. Entitled "
The Fifth Modernization", it complained that after the Cultural Revolution, the status quo remained unchallenged. The only democracy acknowledged was "democracy under collective leadership", which was only lip service when people were not actually allowed to make their own decisions. Strongly critical of Mao, Wei called him the "self-exalting autocrat" who led China to the wrong road. He also criticized Deng's regime, under which "the hated old political system has not changed, and even any talk about the much hoped for democracy and freedom is forbidden." He defined true democracy as "the holding of power by the laboring masses" and deemed it a necessary pre-condition for successful modernization. Anyone who refused to grant this democracy was "a shameless bandit no better than a capitalist who robs workers of their money earned with their sweat and blood." He called for action: "Let me call on our comrades: Rally under the banner of democracy and do not trust the autocrats' talk about 'stability and unity.'...Democracy is our only hope. Abandon our democratic rights and we will be shackled once again. Let us believe in our own strength!" Wei Jingsheng was not immediately arrested for putting up this poster, but Deng Xiaoping grew increasingly impatient about such attacks on his policies and the party, which he complained about during the Third Plenum of the Eleventh Central Committee of the Communist Party. Deng was wary that this call for democracy would push the country too rashly for radical liberalization that may return the society to the same chaos as
the Cultural Revolution. On March 16, 1979, Deng announced the "
Four Cardinal Principles," namely the principle of upholding the socialist path, the people's democratic dictatorship, the leadership of CCP, and Mao Zedong Thought and Marxism–Leninism. Without explicit statement, this announcement essentially curtailed people's right to openly criticize the regime. In response,
Wei Jingsheng put up another big-character poster on March 25, 1979, titled "Do we want democracy or a new dictatorship," in which he explicitly criticized Deng Xiaoping. He described Deng as a "true headsman" for suppressing the mass movement and repudiating the democracy movement. This time, he was arrested in four days and taken custody by the Beijing Public Security Bureau. He was brought to trial on October 16, 1979, convicted of being a "counter-revolutionary" and selling "state secrets to foreigners", and was sentenced to fifteen years imprisonment.
The end of big-character poster as a legitimate form of political writing Deng Xiaoping moved on to impose more restrictive statutes and ordinances on big-character posters. The Beijing Municipal Revolutionary Committee passed an ordinance on April 6, 1976, stating that the posting of big-character posters on streets, public forums, and buildings was prohibited "except in designed places." Similar ordinances were subsequently passed in all of China's provincial capitals by April 1979. On November 29, 1979, the National People's Congress passed another resolution restricting big-character posters, this time targeting
the Xidan Democracy Wall. It defined the Democracy Wall as being "used by people who have the secret motive to violate the law, disrupt social order, and hinder the smooth implementation of the Four Modernizations." On December 6, 1979, the Beijing Municipal Revolutionary Committee passed an ordinance, prohibiting the posting of big-character posters at Xidan Democracy Wall (and all places other than the designated site in Yuetan Park). It also required all writers to register their real name, address, and work unit. On September 10, 1980, the National People's Congress passed another resolution, which deleted the right to put up big-character posters, along with the other Great Freedoms, from the Constitution, in the name of "[giving] full scope to socialist democracy, [improving] the socialist legal system, [maintaining] political stability and unity, and [ensuring] the smooth progress of the socialist modernization program." Despite such restrictions, big-character posters were still posted in the 1980s, mostly by students. In 1980, in Changsha, during the election for the local people's congress, many big-character posters questioned the candidates' qualifications. In December 1986, students in Beijing and other major cities posted big-character posters, in which they demanded democratic reforms and even an end to the one-party system. Two posters supporting the concurrent student demonstration went up in Peking University yet was quickly torn down. On December 19, 1986, students in Shanghai Jiaotong University also put up big-character posters when
Jiang Zemin, then Head of the Shanghai Communist Party, discouraged students from holding demonstrations. The official media also condemned the students. ''People's Daily
stated that big-character posters, which created huge chaos during the Cultural Revolution, were "loathed and opposed by the overwhelming majority of Chinese." Beijing Daily
pointed out that big-character posters were not protected by law and urged citizens to remove every big-character poster they encountered. Students burned copies of Beijing Daily
and People's Daily
in protest.'' In 1988, students used big-character posters to complain about the educational environment and student conditions. In 1989, before
the 1989 Tiananmen Square Protest, big-character posters spread from university campuses to Tiananmen Square. ''People's Daily'' again criticized these posters for "defaming, insulting, and attacking the leaders of the Party and the State." Finally, on January 20, 1990, the State Education Commission banned the use of big-character posters on university campuses. In more recent times, these have been replaced with "Heng Fu" (, lit. 'horizontal scroll') with "Biao Yu" (, an inspirational or motivational message or an announcement) inscribed on them. These long, red-colored banners with white or yellow Chinese characters are found all over China in residential complexes as well as in universities and schools. Big-character posters have featured prominently in contemporary Chinese art. Many contemporary artists work with Chinese characters, and
Wu Shanzhuan and
Gu Wenda in particular have appropriated the aesthetics of big-character posters. In
Red Humor (1986), Wu Shanzhuan covered an entire room with sheets of paper written with big characters. Instead of political dissent, the papers are filled with random words, trivial announcements, and disjointed quotations. The work generates an overwhelming visuality similar to the one created by actual big-character posters during the Cultural Revolution. == Content ==