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A comrade in culture and controversy: Yao Wenyuan’s revolutionary legacy

By Harsh Thakor* 
This year marks two important anniversaries in Chinese revolutionary history—the 20th death anniversary of Yao Wenyuan, and the 50th anniversary of his seminal essay "On the Social Basis of the Lin Biao Anti-Party Clique". These milestones invite reflection on the man whose pen ignited the first sparks of the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution and whose sharp ideological interventions left an indelible imprint on the political and cultural landscape of socialist China.
Yao Wenyuan (1931–2005), born in Zhuji County in Zhejiang Province, was the son of leftist writer Yao Benzi and followed in his father’s footsteps into literature and politics. As a literary critic, Yao emerged as one of the most dynamic and controversial members of the so-called "Gang of Four". He was popularly nicknamed "The Cudgel"—a symbol of the force he wielded through his critiques, sharpening ideological campaigns with cutting edge precision.
In the early phase of his political life, Yao gained prominence within the Shanghai chapter of the Chinese Writers' Association. He championed the Maoist line in literature and helped shape the purge of Hu Feng in 1955, attacking liberal literary tendencies and supporting the state’s push for ideological purity. During the "Hundred Flowers" campaign, he targeted writers labeled "right deviationists". His rise was closely aligned with figures such as Zhang Chunqiao, and eventually, Mao Zedong and Jiang Qing, with whom he formed a political-cultural alliance in Shanghai during the early 1960s.
Yao's most famous political act came in 1965 when he published his explosive critique of Wu Han’s play "Hai Rui Dismissed From Office". Wu Han, Beijing’s deputy mayor and a historian, had written the play as an allegorical defense of Peng Dehuai, Mao’s former defense minister who was purged after criticizing the disastrous Great Leap Forward. In Yao’s view, the play wasn’t just a historical drama—it was a camouflaged attack on Mao Zedong himself and the socialist revolution. Writing from Lilac Garden, a Shanghai villa where radical cultural thinkers convened, Yao drafted his article "Notes on the New Historical Drama Hai Rui Dismissed From Office", which was published in the Wenhui Bao and eventually reprinted in the People’s Daily. It was this article that launched the Cultural Revolution.
Yao argued that Wu Han's work was an ideological betrayal, designed to rehabilitate capitalist elements and reverse the socialist gains of the revolution. He saw the drama as advocating for a return to "individual farming" and the restoration of landlord rule, cloaked in historical metaphor. His critique—embedded in Maoist thought—framed the play as a counter-revolutionary tract and declared its author an agent of bourgeois restoration.
In 1966, Yao formally joined the Cultural Revolution Group, headed by Jiang Qing and Chen Boda, becoming a central figure in shaping revolutionary discourse. Alongside Jiang Qing, Wang Hongwen, and Zhang Chunqiao, Yao formed the core of what became known as the "Gang of Four". While the group aggressively pushed cultural transformation, targeting figures like Wu Han and reconfiguring traditional Chinese opera into revolutionary "model plays", Yao continued to straddle cultural and political spheres. He served in leadership roles, including as second secretary of the Shanghai Commune and as a member of the Politburo and Central Committee from 1969.
Yao’s intellectual contribution peaked again in 1975 with the publication of "On the Social Basis of the Lin Biao Anti-Party Clique". This article offered a comprehensive Marxist analysis of how bourgeois ideology could take root within a socialist society. Yao warned of "bourgeois right under the signboard of socialism", arguing that such tendencies threatened to reverse the dictatorship of the proletariat. He described Lin Biao’s approach as a covert strategy to reintroduce capitalism, cloaked in socialist rhetoric. He critiqued Lin’s rejection of intellectual re-education and portrayed his clique as agents for a bourgeois restoration—plotting coups, spreading slander, and undermining proletarian control.
Yet Yao’s career ended in ignominy. After Mao’s death in 1976, the Gang of Four was swiftly arrested by Hua Guofeng and Ye Jianying. The Party launched a campaign to discredit the group. Yao received a relatively light sentence—twenty years in prison and five years’ deprivation of political rights. He was released in 1996 and spent his remaining years in Shanghai, writing and reflecting on history. He passed away on December 23, 2005, reportedly from diabetes. He was the last surviving member of the Gang of Four.
Though often vilified, Yao Wenyuan remains a complex figure. His ideological rigor and contributions to revolutionary cultural theory were unparalleled. Yet his approach was not without flaws. At times, he fell into the trap of dogmatism—focusing too narrowly on individuals rather than structural shortcomings in the CPC’s practice of mass line or the deeper causes of capitalist restoration. His inability to defend his position during the 1981 trial showed a lack of the revolutionary defiance he once espoused.
Nonetheless, on this solemn occasion, it is worth remembering Yao not only as a literary warrior and ideological crusader but as a symbol of an era when words sparked revolutions. Whether as critic, comrade, or cultural combatant, Yao Wenyuan’s legacy deserves reexamination—not for blind glorification, but to better understand the contradictions, courage, and complexities of a revolutionary who shaped history with his pen.
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*Freelance journalist

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