29
29
                              
                                                                                                                                              
China's Cultural Revolution, Asia Publishing House, Bombay, India, 1970, pp. 9-13.
11. Nancy Makepeace Tanner,  On Becoming Human: A model of the transition
from ape to human & the reconstruction of early human social life, Cambridge
University Press, New York, 1981, pp. 104-5.
12. Yukimara Sugiyama, "Social Organization of Hanuman Langurs," in Stuart A.
Altmann, ed., Social Communication Among Primates, The University of Chicago
Press, Chicago, 1967, reprinted by The Midway Press, 1982, pp. 230-31.  Kenji
Yoshiba, "Local and Intertroop Variability in Ecology and Social Behavior of
Common Indian Langurs," in Phyllis C. Jay, ed., Primates: Studies in Adaptation
and Variability, Holt, Rinehart and Winston, New York, 1968, p. 236.  Edward O.
Wilson,  Sociobiology: The Abridged Edition, The Belknap Press of Harvard
University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1980, pp. 10, 38.  David P. Barash,
Sociobiology and Behavior, Elsevier Scientific Publishing Company, New York,
1977, p. 99;  David P. Barash, The Whisperings Within: Evolution and the Origin of
Human Nature, Penguin Books, New York, 1979, p. 102-103; "Bound To Bicker;
Pubescent Primates Leave home For Good Reasons.  Our Teens Stay With Us
And Squabble," Laurence Steinberg, Ph.D., Psychology Today, September, 1987,
p. 38.  Barash's two books, by the way, constitute an extremely good introduction to
the relatively new field of sociobiology.  The Whisperings Within is a delightfully
written overview for the layman.  And Sociobiology and Behavior is a
comprehensive academic overview.  For those willing to tackle the difficult, there is
the ultimate sociobiology book, an intellectual tour de force, E.O. Wilson's
Sociobiology.  This is the book that virtually created the field of sociobiology.
13.  Gao Yuan, Born Red: A Chronicle of the Cultural Revolution, p. 53.
14. Mao gloated that "All those who have tried to repress the student movement in
China have ended up badly." (K.S. Karol, The Second Chinese Revolution, p. 112.)
15. The entire tale told in this chapter is from Gao Yuan's book Born Red.
Additional historical background is given in the book's introduction by William A.
Joseph of Wellesley College and in Wolfram Eberhard's A History of China,
Routledge & Kegan Paul, London, 1977 edition, pp. 347-348.  For Mao's success in
regaining power, see also: K.S. Karol, The Second Chinese Revolution, pp.
345-349; and Gargi Dutt and V.P. Dutt, China's Cultural Revolution, pp. 206-234.
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