The paper "Great Chaos in China" is a great example of a history article review. The article seeks to explain the events in China in the summer of the year 1967, which left the country in a bad shape. It is known as �The Great Cultural Revolution in China� and links the violence experienced on the ground to statements and policies made by the highest levels of the communist party of China by then headed by Mao. The article seeks to show how and why Mao must bear personal responsibility for what stands out as the darkest history of the People�s Republic of China (Schoenhals 277). On January 3, 1967, Lin Biao and Jiang Qing employed the local media, which was used as a medium to criticise and purge many prominent Shanghai municipal leaders. This counter-revolutionary activity paved way for Wang Hongwen to take charge as a city leader of Municipal Revolutionary Committee, and abolishment of municipal government. Political struggles took place among the government arms and individuals saw this as an opportunity to put the blame on rivals. Mao used the Peoples� Daily Paper to promote these wrangles where he urged officials to rise in self-criticism, and rise against others suspected of being on the opposite camp. Many powers struggle ensued among the local government, and this led to the collapse of the government structure (Schoenhals 278). Schoenhals, in this article, claims that the great strike against cultural revisionism launched by Mao Zedong under the name �Great cultural revision� has attracted many writers over the last two decades. The CPP Chairman Mao is obscured with the personal responsibility for what happened in China in the summer if 1967 (Schoenhals 277).