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City Versus Countryside in Mao's China: Negotiating the Divide

City Versus Countryside in Mao's China: Negotiating the Divide

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Professor Jeremy Brown
Cambridge University Press, 6/18/2012
EAN 9781107024045, ISBN10: 1107024048

Hardcover, 268 pages, 22.8 x 15.2 x 1.5 cm
Language: English

The gap between those living in the city and those in the countryside remains one of China's most intractable problems. As this powerful work of grassroots history argues, the origins of China's rural-urban divide can be traced back to the Mao Zedong era. While Mao pledged to remove the gap between the city worker and the peasant, his revolutionary policies misfired and ended up provoking still greater discrepancies between town and country, usually to the disadvantage of villagers. Through archival sources, personal diaries, untapped government dossiers and interviews with people from cities and villages in northern China, the book recounts their personal experiences, showing how they retaliated against the daily restrictions imposed on them while traversing between the city and the countryside. Vivid and harrowing accounts of forced and illicit migration, the staggering inequity of the Great Leap Famine and political exile during the Cultural Revolution reveal how Chinese people fought back against policies that pitted city dwellers against villagers.

Introduction
1. The city leads the village
governing Tianjin in the early 1950s
2. Eating, moving, and working
3. Tianjin's great leap
urban survival, rural starvation
4. The great downsizing of 1961–3
5. The four cleanups and urban youth in Tianjin's hinterland
6. Purifying the city
the deportation of political outcasts during the Cultural Revolution
7. Neither urban nor rural
in-between spaces in the 1960s and 1970s
8. Staging Xiaojinzhuang
the urban occupation of a model village, 1974–8
Epilogue.