China's great experimentalistNick Land / text
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China's great experimentalist
By Nick Land
Shanghai Star. 2004-08-26
The centennial anniversary of Deng Xiaoping’s birth is a natural time to
reflect upon this extraordinary individual and leader, to whom the world in
general, and China in particular, owe an incalculable debt. Deng was not only
a revolutionary, even more consequentially he had the resilient courage,
intellectual agility and vision to revolutionize the revolution, transforming
Chinese Marxism into the greatest political engine of social and economic
development that the world has ever known.
Shanghai has its own special relationship with Deng, based on its intense
and hugely beneficial involvement in the tidal wave of “reform and opening
up?which he initiated. The Pudong New Area is a child of this policy, and the
city’s entire skyline pays homage to it.
In the early months of 1992 Deng remarked: “In retrospect, one of my biggest
mistakes was leaving out Shanghai when we launched the four special
economic zones. If Shanghai had been included, the situation with regard to
reform and opening in the Yangtze River valley and, indeed, the whole
country would be quite different.? These remarks are noteworthy in several
respects. Firstly, they exercised what Western philosophers of language call
“illocutionary force? they did not merely describe a situation, they rather
acted to bring about change: serving as a trigger for the spectacular
metamorphosis Shanghai has since undergone.
Secondly, they exemplified Deng’s understated, self-critical mode of
leadership, eschewing personality cultism (“the two whatevers? in order to
better learn from the people, encouraging their initiative and spreading their
best practices throughout the country.
Thirdly, and perhaps most importantly, they express a profoundly
experimental approach to social development (concealed somewhat by
Deng’s modest mode of expression).
This spirit of experimentation, it might be argued, was Deng’s single greatest
strength. It was because Deng recognized a similar experimental boldness in
his predecessor, Mao Zedong, that he politely countered the critical remarks
aimed at Mao proposed by feisty Italian journalist Oriana Fallaci. Mao indeed
made mistakes, as Deng readily confirmed, but the basic tenet of Mao
Zedong Thought ?“seeking truth from facts??also provided the sole reliable
guide to correcting them.
Deng’s own pragmatic approach to social development built upon this
founding principle of Chinese Marxism, abandoning all rigid ideological
fixations in order to respond flexibly to reality, “crossing the river by feeling
the stones.? To “seek truth from facts?is to proceed experimentally, and