black gangster
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Chinese 黑幫/黑帮 (hēibāng, “gangsters, gang”). The first character, 黑, translates as "black" on its own.
Noun
black gangster (plural black gangsters)
- (politics, historical, derogatory) propaganda term used by Mao Zedong against opponents
- 1968, Survey of China Mainland Press: Supplement, page 14:
- […] and branded more than one-third of the people in the Agriculture Ministry as "rightists" or "black gangsters."
- 1970, Jan S. Prybyla, The Political Economy of Communist China, page 539:
- It was not always clear who was a counterrevolutionary or a black gangster for that matter. Former landlords, capitalists, and rich peasants were more readily spotted, but even here there was some difficulty […]
- 2016, Philip Short, Mao: The Man Who Made China, page 534:
- The radicals held that Liu's men were 'black gangsters' in league with the ousted Party committees.
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see black, gangster. (i.e. one with black skin)
See also
Further reading
- 黑帮 (文革) on the Chinese Wikipedia.Wikipedia zh
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