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  1. Thoughts on March 8 (Simplified Chinese characters: 《三八节有感》) was written in 1942 by Ding Ling, wherein she discusses her thoughts on politics and the role of women in China in the context of March 8, Women's Day.

  2. It hints at a pattern among top CCP leaders (including Mao Zedong) to divorce their aging wives and choose younger women available in Yan'an. The following article originally appeared the day after Women's Day (March 8) 1942 in the literary section of the Liberation Daily, Yan'an's main newspaper.

  3. Thoughts on 8 March (Women’s Day) - Ting Ling. A discussion of Women's Day - written in 1942 in Yenan, China, where the Red Army had settled in cave dwellings at the end of their Long March retreat. This text was one of several that made criticisms of the ruling Maoist elite at Yenan.

  4. 25 de mar. de 2019 · Published in 1942, “Thoughts on March 8” is an explicit work of feminist critique on the hypocritical treatment of women in the CCP. March 8, International Women’s Day, seemed liked the perfect, dramatic moment to express her thought.

  5. 8 de ene. de 2020 · A discussion of Women's Day - written in 1942 in Yenan, China, where the Red Army had settled in cave dwellings at the end of their Long March retreat. This text was one of several that made criticisms of the ruling Maoist elite at Yenan.

  6. 1 de sept. de 2018 · Thoughts on March 8 (China, 1942) Posted on September 1, 2018 by sirtutist. Standard. Ding Ling, 1904 – 1986. Background. Ding Ling was a respected writer who questioned the limitations of women within the Communist party she was part of.

  7. 10 de mar. de 2021 · In “Thoughts on March 8,” Ding Ling points unflinchingly at the hypocrisy in Yan’an. She begins by asking, in terms that resonate in many political debates today on the nature of identity politics, “When will it no longer be necessary to attach special weight to the word ‘woman’?”