Prelude Before 1962, the Chinese media never mentioned who Mao Zedong's wife was in its international propaganda. People close to Mao Zedong claimed that after the 1950s, Jiang Qing was rarely seen by his side, and their emotional relationship had essentially ended, leaving her feeling frustrated for a time. However, as the 1960s progressed, Mao became increasingly distrustful of the surrounding leaders and his judgment of the domestic political situation grew more severe. Jiang Qing capitalised on this shift, becoming more outspoken, which led Mao to view her as "politically sensitive" and start to trust her. As a result, her power grew steadily. After Jiang's return to China from the Soviet Union in 1962, she frequently attended local opera performances. In 1963, Jiang Qing enlisted A Jia to help modernise Beijing Opera with revolutionary socialist themes. She later instructed the
Beijing Municipal Opera Company to create
Shajiabang, depicting the struggle between the Kuomintang and Communists during the
Second Sino-Japanese War, and tasked the
Shanghai Beijing Opera Company with producing
Taking Tiger Mountain by Strategy. The group studied writings by Mao, watched films and plays, and met with the cast and crew of an in-progress film production. The forum concluded that a "black line" of
bourgeois thought dominated the arts since the PRC's founding. According to this interpretation, the history of socialist culture was a
class struggle between reactionary and proletarian lines, and a large majority of writers failed to resist bourgeois ideological influence.
Revolutionary operas '' with
President and
Mrs Nixon and others In 1967 Jiang declared eight works of performance art to be the new models for proletarian literature and art. These "model operas", or "
revolutionary operas", were designed to glorify Mao Zedong, The People's Liberation Army, and the revolutionary struggles. The ballets
White-Haired Girl,
Red Detachment of Women, and
Shajiabang were included in the list of eight, and were closely associated with Jiang, because of their inclusion of elements from Chinese and Western opera, dance, and music. The Red Guards condemned
Yu Huiyong to be a "bad element" for propagating feudalism through his utilisation of traditional Chinese music in operas. Yu was also tagged as "a democrat hiding under the banner of the Communist Party" due to his frequent absences in party meetings. In 1966, Yu was subsequently sent to a Cow Shed, a small room where the "bad elements" were confined. In October 1966, Yu was released after Jiang requested a meeting with Yu to stage the production of two operas in Beijing. Jiang seated Yu next to her, as a display of Yu's importance in the making of yangbanxi, during the showing of
Taking Tiger Mountain by Strategy.
Fashion designs In 1974, Jiang Qing directed the
Ministry of Culture to design a new dress for Chinese women, inspired by elements of women's clothing from the
Song dynasty. The dress was called the Jiang Qing Dress. The dress featured a symmetrical V-neckline, differing slightly from the traditional Y-shaped neckline of
Hanfu. Mockingly dubbed the "Nun's Robe," Jiang intended for female cadres to lead the way in wearing it, with the eventual goal of making it a nationwide standard.
Political activism During this period, Mao galvanised students and young workers as his
paramilitary organisation the
Red Guards to attack what he termed as
revisionists in the party. Mao told them the revolution was in danger and that they must do all they could to stop the emergence of a
privileged class in China. He argued this is what had happened in the
Soviet Union under
Khrushchev. With time, Jiang began playing an increasingly active political role in the movement. She took part in most important Party and government activities. Jiang took advantage of the Cultural Revolution to wreak vengeance on her personal enemies, including people who had slighted her during her acting career in the 1930s. She was supported by a radical coterie, dubbed, by Mao himself, the Gang of Four. She became a prominent member of the Central Cultural Revolution Group and a major player in Chinese politics from 1966 to 1976. with Jiang Qing in Tiananmen in 1966 On 13 December 1966, Liu Shaoqi voluntarily offered to resign from his positions as
President. He proposed moving with his wife and children to Yan'an or his hometown in Hunan to take up farming, hoping to bring the Cultural Revolution to an early conclusion and minimise the damage to the country. On 18 December,
Zhang Chunqiao, deputy head of the Central Cultural Revolution Group, summoned
Kuai Dafu, a leader of the Red Guards at
Tsinghua University, and instructed him to launch a campaign to overthrow Liu Shaoqi. On 25 December, Kuai Dafu led thousands of demonstrators in Tiananmen Square, where they publicly chanted the slogan "Down with Liu Shaoqi." The
Central Cultural Revolution Group was initially a small body under the
Standing Committee of the Politburo. Jiang had come to view the popular tunes as akin to
yellow music. When traditional landscape and bird-and-flower paintings re-emerged in the early 1970s, Jiang criticised these traditional forms as "
black paintings", which in fact targeted Zhou Enlai.
1971–1973 Jiang first collaborated with then second-in-charge Lin Biao, but after Lin Biao's death in 1971, she turned against him publicly in the
Criticise Lin, Criticise Confucius Campaign. After the
September 13 Incident in 1971, Jiang Qing saw the collapse of the Lin Biao faction and, with Mao Zedong's declining health, she became eager to seize the highest power in the country. In 1972, Jiang Qing enlisted American scholar
Roxane Witke to write her autobiography. After 1972, Mao's health deteriorated. Though Mao was largely cut off from the outside world due to his illness, Zhu De sent Mao a letter informing him about Jiang Qing's biography. This revelation deeply angered Mao, who, in a fit of rage, even expressed his desire to expel Jiang Qing from the Politburo and sever their political ties. After Zhou Enlai was hospitalised, Wang Hongwen managed the Politburo, Deng Xiaoping oversaw the State Council, and Ye Jianying led the Central Military Commission. On 12 December, Mao reaffirmed his support for Deng by proposing his appointment as a member of both the Military Commission and the Politburo—a suggestion that gained majority approval from Politburo members. On 23 December, despite his ill health, Zhou Enlai flew to Changsha to meet Mao and seek his endorsement of Deng Xiaoping, with Wang Hongwen also in attendance. Mao agreed and, while pointing at Wang, remarked that Deng's
"politics is better than his.
" Mao spoke English for the word "politics." Wang was embarrassed as he did not understand. ==Downfall==