Paradoxes of Post-Mao Rural Reform: Initial Steps toward a New Chinese Countryside, 1976-1981

Author:   Frederick C. Teiwes (University of Sydney, Australia) ,  Warren Sun (Monash University, Australia)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780367597351


Pages:   350
Publication Date:   30 June 2020
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Paradoxes of Post-Mao Rural Reform: Initial Steps toward a New Chinese Countryside, 1976-1981


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Author:   Frederick C. Teiwes (University of Sydney, Australia) ,  Warren Sun (Monash University, Australia)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.453kg
ISBN:  

9780367597351


ISBN 10:   0367597357
Pages:   350
Publication Date:   30 June 2020
Audience:   College/higher education ,  General/trade ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1. From the Dazhai Model to Hua Guofeng’s Pro-Peasant Policies, October 1976–Summer 1978 2. The Pre-Third Plenum Work Conference: Pro-Peasant Policies, Conflict, and the Ban on Household Contracting, November–December 1978 3. Household Responsibility Emerges as a Contentious Issue, 1978–1979 4. New Leadership And Uncertain Policy: Conflict in the National Context, 1980 5. The Gate to Decollectivization Decisively Opened Despite Uncertainty, 1981 6. Conclusion

Reviews

Teiwes (Univ. of Sydney, Australia) and Sun (Monash Univ., Australia) set out dispelling some misunderstandings about China's rural reform in the early post-Mao period (1976-81). For the first two years after Mao's death, Hua Guofeng was the dominant figure in rural policy, steadily moving in a pro-peasant direction. By early 1980, when the political power transition was complete, Deng Xiaoping was as committed to collective agriculture as Hua. Meanwhile, provincial leaders such as Zhao Ziyang and Wan Li were experimenting with de-collectivization policies, namely baochan daohu (contracting production to households). The household responsibility system proved successful as agricultural production increased in the early 1980s. Deng gradually endorsed Zhao's policy initiative and shifted from Hua's pro-peasant policy of increased resources to the countryside to a pro-state policy that reduced rural burden on national coffers, leaving production at the household level. With the empirical study of major developments involving politics from the highest level in Beijing to rural villages, the book captures the dynamics of rural reform in the early post-Mao era. This is a highly informative account of Chinese politics and major decision making as Deng emerged as the supreme leader after Mao. Z. Zhu, Bucknell University, CHOICE One of the core features of Teiwes and Sun's work over the last decades has been to question the story of the demise of Hua Guofeng, and the ineffectiveness of his brief tenure of ultimate power in the People's Republic. Hua was Mao's final chosen successor, and had emerged largely from provincial leadership before catching Mao's eye in his final years. The authors make clear that his relative youth and lack of revolutionary experience compared to Deng meant that his hold on power after the radical Gang of Four were removed from power was always under question. Kerry Brown, King's College, London In sum, a complex and unplanned interplay between the top leadership and provincial and subprovincial levels of the bureaucratic structure, involving ambigious directives from reformers at the top who were hesistantly open to household framing and ongoing pressure among provincial and subprovincial officials to react, gradually culminated in the countryside's near-total abandonment of agricultural collectives. There had been no master plan, no deliberate effort from above to steer all of rural China uniformly down a single path. Yet, due to the nature of Chinese political organiztion and practices, that is precisely what occurred. Over the course of a four-year period all of rural China was launched into an entirely new agrarian order. It was an extraordinary turning point in PRC history. Teiwes and Sun capture this well, showing the important cumulative details of incremental shifts while never losing sight of the broader scenario. The authors deserve applause. Jonathon Unger, Australian National University, The China Journal, No. 79 Teiwes and Sun have dismantled a key story about the reform period, and their work should be read by all interested in recent Chinese history or politics, not just those focused on rural issues. Alexander F. Day, Occidental College, Pacific Affairs, Volume 91, No. 3 Using a broad range of sources, the authors discuss and revise several established truths about the first stages of rural reform. ... [The book is] full of important arguments and fascinating details that both historians and political scientists will enjoy. Stig Thogersen, Aarhus University, The China Quarterly, Volume 234


Teiwes (Univ. of Sydney, Australia) and Sun (Monash Univ., Australia) set out dispelling some misunderstandings about China's rural reform in the early post-Mao period (1976-81). For the first two years after Mao's death, Hua Guofeng was the dominant figure in rural policy, steadily moving in a pro-peasant direction. By early 1980, when the political power transition was complete, Deng Xiaoping was as committed to collective agriculture as Hua. Meanwhile, provincial leaders such as Zhao Ziyang and Wan Li were experimenting with de-collectivization policies, namely baochan daohu (contracting production to households). The household responsibility system proved successful as agricultural production increased in the early 1980s. Deng gradually endorsed Zhao's policy initiative and shifted from Hua's pro-peasant policy of increased resources to the countryside to a pro-state policy that reduced rural burden on national coffers, leaving production at the household level. With the empirical study of major developments involving politics from the highest level in Beijing to rural villages, the book captures the dynamics of rural reform in the early post-Mao era. This is a highly informative account of Chinese politics and major decision making as Deng emerged as the supreme leader after Mao. Z. Zhu, Bucknell University, CHOICE One of the core features of Teiwes and Sun's work over the last decades has been to question the story of the demise of Hua Guofeng, and the ineffectiveness of his brief tenure of ultimate power in the People's Republic. Hua was Mao's final chosen successor, and had emerged largely from provincial leadership before catching Mao's eye in his final years. The authors make clear that his relative youth and lack of revolutionary experience compared to Deng meant that his hold on power after the radical Gang of Four were removed from power was always under question. Kerry Brown,


""Teiwes (Univ. of Sydney, Australia) and Sun (Monash Univ., Australia) set out dispelling some misunderstandings about China’s rural reform in the early post-Mao period (1976–81). For the first two years after Mao’s death, Hua Guofeng was the dominant figure in rural policy, steadily moving in a pro-peasant direction. By early 1980, when the political power transition was complete, Deng Xiaoping was as committed to collective agriculture as Hua. Meanwhile, provincial leaders such as Zhao Ziyang and Wan Li were experimenting with de-collectivization policies, namely baochan daohu (contracting production to households). The household responsibility system proved successful as agricultural production increased in the early 1980s. Deng gradually endorsed Zhao’s policy initiative and shifted from Hua’s pro-peasant policy of increased resources to the countryside to a pro-state policy that reduced rural burden on national coffers, leaving production at the household level. With the empirical study of major developments involving politics from the highest level in Beijing to rural villages, the book captures the dynamics of rural reform in the early post-Mao era. This is a highly informative account of Chinese politics and major decision making as Deng emerged as the supreme leader after Mao."" Z. Zhu, Bucknell University, CHOICE ""One of the core features of Teiwes and Sun’s work over the last decades has been to question the story of the demise of Hua Guofeng, and the ineffectiveness of his brief tenure of ultimate power in the People’s Republic. Hua was Mao’s final chosen successor, and had emerged largely from provincial leadership before catching Mao’s eye in his final years. The authors make clear that his relative youth and lack of revolutionary experience compared to Deng meant that his hold on power after the radical Gang of Four were removed from power was always under question."" Kerry Brown, King's College, London ""In sum, a complex and unplanned interplay between the top leadership and provincial and subprovincial levels of the bureaucratic structure, involving ambigious directives from reformers at the top who were hesistantly open to household framing and ongoing pressure among provincial and subprovincial officials to react, gradually culminated in the countryside's near-total abandonment of agricultural collectives. There had been no master plan, no deliberate effort from above to steer all of rural China uniformly down a single path. Yet, due to the nature of Chinese political organiztion and practices, that is precisely what occurred. Over the course of a four-year period all of rural China was launched into an entirely new agrarian order. It was an extraordinary turning point in PRC history. Teiwes and Sun capture this well, showing the important cumulative details of incremental shifts while never losing sight of the broader scenario. The authors deserve applause."" Jonathon Unger, Australian National University, The China Journal, No. 79 ""Teiwes and Sun have dismantled a key story about the reform period, and their work should be read by all interested in recent Chinese history or politics, not just those focused on rural issues."" Alexander F. Day, Occidental College, Pacific Affairs, Volume 91, No. 3 ""Using a broad range of sources, the authors discuss and revise several established truths about the first stages of rural reform. ... [The book is] full of important arguments and fascinating details that both historians and political scientists will enjoy."" Stig Thøgersen, Aarhus University, The China Quarterly, Volume 234


Author Information

Frederick C. Teiwes is Emeritus Professor of Chinese Politics at the University of Sydney, Australia. Warren Sun is Reader in the Chinese Studies Program at Monash University, Australia.

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