Liu Binyan published influential critiques of the consequences of Party management in the 1950s. In rapid succession he encountered recognition, approval, criticism, and finally prosecution for crimes against the Party. In October 1955, he acted as the interpreter for visiting Soviet writer
Valentin Ovechkin, who later tried to help Liu Binyan by writing a letter to
Zhou Enlai. Liu Binyan learned from Ovechkin's style and wrote the work "On the Bridge Worksite".
A Pair of Articles with a Big Impact In 1956, he published "On the Bridge Worksite" (《在桥梁工地上》 "Zai qiaoliang gongdi shang"), which exposed bureaucratism and corruption, and "The Inside Story of Our Newspaper" ( 《本报内部消息》 "Benbao neibu xiaoxi"), about press control. The two works had a powerful nationwide impact. According to Liu, "'On the Bridge Construction Site' had been the first piece to criticize the Party itself since Mao Zedong had laid down the dictum in 1942 in his '
Talks at the Yan'an Forum' that writers should 'extol the bright side of life' and 'not expose' the darkness.
Labeled a "Rightist" In 1957, following the publication of "On the Bridge Worksite" and "The Inside Story of Our Newspaper," Liu was labeled a "rightist" and expelled from the CCP (see
Hundred Flowers Campaign). The campaign against Liu Binyan was closely associated with the campaign against another social critic and author,
Wang Meng, who had recently published a highly influential work, "A New Arrival at the Organization Department."
Interim Years After being rehabilitated in the 1960s, he again fell out of favor in 1969, and was condemned to a
forced labor detention camp, where he spent eight years. After being rehabilitated again, he built up a sound reputation as a reformer and a corruption watchdog. From 1957 onward, he spent a total of 21 years in and out of labor camps. ==Second Big Impact:
People or Monsters in 1979==