by the remains could also pick up such items as "Lucky cigarettes" ( Jili xiangyan ), the packet of which featured a picture of the Mao-as-Abe-Lincoln statue inside the hall. Also available were Mao cigarette lighters that noisily chimed "The East Is Red" (see Figure 24) or "Jingle Bells," imitation ivory Mao Memorial Hall chopsticks, tacky shopping bags, cuff links, barometers, glow-in-the-dark busts, Mao lighters, diamond-studded Mao watches, pocket watches with Mao holograms and a plethora of Mao-inspired postage stamps (see Figure 25).
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In Shaoshan, Mao brooches, tie clips, watches, badges, and pendants with spectral holograms of the leader's head could be purchased (see Figures 26, 27), while in various parts of the country shoppers could pick up numerous other novelty items, such as Mao yo-yos containing a computer chip that enabled it to chortle the words of "The East Is Red," and T-shirts with fawning slogans such as "I Love Chairman Mao" or "I Like to Study His Books Most" (see Figures 28, 29); or slightly more ironical statements such as "A spark can start a prairie fire'' ( xingxing zhi huo keyi liao yuan ), or clever and pointed distortions of famous Mao quotes such as "I don't fear hardship, I'm not scared of dying, nor am I afraid of you" ( yi bupa ku, er bupa si, ye bupa ni ), 192 and even a type of shirt with a caricature of Mao held up by a worker-peasant-soldier trinity bearing the logo "assures safety and exorcises evil" ( baoan pixie ). 193
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In late 1993 fashionable purveyors of wannabe po-mo (postmodern) culture in Beijing even produced a pastiche calender for 1994-95 featuring both Mao and Deng in cut-up collage 194 (see Figures 30a, 30b, 30c). Those with more traditional tastes in representations of the Great Leader, however, could obtain a series of Cultural Revolution-style Mao matchbox covers ( huochaihe ) at the Baihua Bookstore in Beijing, opposite the China Art Gallery between Wangfujing and Shatan'r, which specializes in art books 195 (see Figure 31).
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Through books, comics, films, television and music the Older Generation of Revolutionary Leaders, as Mao and his coevals are known, have become part of the audiovisual repertoire of mass pop culture. In the early 1990s, a popular interlude at any major celebration held by a wealthy work unit in the capital or on television would be to welcome some of the actors who play the Older Revolutionaries to do a turn. 196 As I have written elsewhere, "Doing their patter in heavy local accents and done up in a modern version of opera masks ( lianpu )Mao with his brush-backed hair and mole, Lin bald and myopic, Zhou bushy-browed and face drawnthey act as comics or compères, talking heads who add a touch of class to an evening's entertainment." 197 At least these dead leaders have a status to live up to and the stature to appear in
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