5 INTRODUCTION
  Chapter One
  THE SUBSTANCE OF MAOIST PHILOSOPHY
15 1. Ideological Origins
27 2. The Meaning of Marxist Terminology in Mao’s Writings
33 3. On the Real Meaning of Maoist Dialectics
49 4. Subjective Idealism Instead of the Materialist View of History
  Chapter Two
  GREAT-HAN CHAUVINISM AND HECEMONISM PRESENTED AS PROLETARIAN INTERNATIONALISM
62 1. The Sources of Great-Han Chauvinism and Hegemonism in the Views of Mao and His Followers
72 2. Great-Han Chauvinism and Hegemonism in the Guise of Proletarian Internationalism
  Chapter Three
  ANTITHESIS OF THE MARXIST AND THE MAOIST VIEW OF PROLETARIAN REVOLUTION, WAR AND PEACE
90 1. Is Chinese Experience Alone a Basis for Producing Laws for the Whole World?
95 2. On the Two Ways of Socialist Revolution
101 3. Peaceful Coexistence of the Two Systems and the Revolutionary Movement in Individual Countries
106 4. “World Revolution” and World Thermonuclear War
  Chapter Four
  THE ATTITUDE OF MARXISM AND OF MAOISM TO THE STATE AND PROLETARIAN LEGALITY
115 1. When an “Antitoxin” Becomes a Toxin
120 2. The “State and Revolution” Problem in the Light of Events in China
129 3. On the Question of Mao’s Personality Cult
138 4. Political Arbitrariness Instead of Socialist Democracy and Legality
145 5. Ideological Justification of the Regime of Political Arbitrariness in Mao’s Works
152 6. On the True Essence of the “Cultural Revolution”
  Chapter Five
  THE MAOIST CONCEPTION OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE SOCIAL STRUCTURE AND THE CLASS STRUGGLE
165 1. Development of Social Relations in China from 1949 to 1957
173 2. Line of “Leaping Over” Objective Laws
176 3. Curtailment of the Vanguard Role of the Working Class
184 4. Artificial Aggravation of Class Struggle
193 5. Class Struggle Without the Struggle Against the Bourgeoisie
195 6. Class Struggle: Pretext for Repression
201 7. Concerning Mao’s Attitude to the Working Class
  Chapter Six
  RELATION OF POLITICS AND ECONOMICS IN THE THEORY AND PRACTICE OF MAOISM
206 1. Role of Economics in Social Development Minimised
212 2. Mao’s View of Socialist Economic Development
223 3. The “Great Leap Forward”: Collapse and Consequences
236 4. Zigzags in Peking’s Economic Policy
242 5. Some Aspects of China’s Foreign Policy
  Chapter Seven
  “GREAT PROLETARIAN CULTURAL REVOLUTION”, OR DRIVE AGAINST WORLD CULTURE
249 [introduction.]
251 1. The Cultural Revolution and the Cultural Legacy
262 2. Socialist Culture and Its “Critics”
269 3. The “Cultural Revolution” in China and the Intelligentsia
277 4. The Maoist Cultural Policy After the “Cultural Revolution”
282 CONCLUSION
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Notes