Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Cast of Characters: Da Fo Village (Great Buddha), 1920–1993
- Chronology of Important Events
- Map 1 Provinces of China, neighboring countries, and area of study
- Map 2 Hebei-Shandong-Henan border area, showing location of Da Fo village
- INTRODUCTION
- 1 THE REPUBLICAN ERA AND THE EMERGENCE OF COMMUNIST LEADERSHIP DURING THE ANTI-JAPANESE WAR OF RESISTANCE
- 2 THE ASCENT OF THE VIGILANTE MILITIA: THE VIOLENT ANTECEDENTS OF MAO'S WAR COMMUNISM
- 3 THE ONSET OF COLLECTIVIZATION AND POPULAR DISSATISFACTION WITH MAO'S “YELLOW BOMB” ROAD
- 4 THE MANDATE ABANDONED: THE DISASTER OF THE GREAT LEAP FORWARD
- 5 STRATEGIES OF SURVIVAL AND THEIR ELIMINATION IN THE GREAT LEAP FORWARD
- 6 THE ESCAPE FROM FAMINE AND DEATH
- 7 INDIGNATION AND FRUSTRATED RETALIATION: THE POLITICS OF DISENGAGEMENT
- 8 THE MARKET COMES FIRST: THE ECONOMICS OF DISENGAGEMENT AND THE ORIGINS OF REFORM
- 9 PERSISTENT MEMORIES AND LONG-DELAYED RETALIATION IN THE REFORM ERA
- CONCLUSION
- Bibliography
- Index
- Plate section
6 - THE ESCAPE FROM FAMINE AND DEATH
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 May 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Cast of Characters: Da Fo Village (Great Buddha), 1920–1993
- Chronology of Important Events
- Map 1 Provinces of China, neighboring countries, and area of study
- Map 2 Hebei-Shandong-Henan border area, showing location of Da Fo village
- INTRODUCTION
- 1 THE REPUBLICAN ERA AND THE EMERGENCE OF COMMUNIST LEADERSHIP DURING THE ANTI-JAPANESE WAR OF RESISTANCE
- 2 THE ASCENT OF THE VIGILANTE MILITIA: THE VIOLENT ANTECEDENTS OF MAO'S WAR COMMUNISM
- 3 THE ONSET OF COLLECTIVIZATION AND POPULAR DISSATISFACTION WITH MAO'S “YELLOW BOMB” ROAD
- 4 THE MANDATE ABANDONED: THE DISASTER OF THE GREAT LEAP FORWARD
- 5 STRATEGIES OF SURVIVAL AND THEIR ELIMINATION IN THE GREAT LEAP FORWARD
- 6 THE ESCAPE FROM FAMINE AND DEATH
- 7 INDIGNATION AND FRUSTRATED RETALIATION: THE POLITICS OF DISENGAGEMENT
- 8 THE MARKET COMES FIRST: THE ECONOMICS OF DISENGAGEMENT AND THE ORIGINS OF REFORM
- 9 PERSISTENT MEMORIES AND LONG-DELAYED RETALIATION IN THE REFORM ERA
- CONCLUSION
- Bibliography
- Index
- Plate section
Summary
Between the autumn harvest of 1959 and the spring hunger of 1960, the existential situation of Da Fo's inhabitants deteriorated sharply. Reduced to one-fourth jin (4.2 ounces) of food per day – the equivalent of about two cups of rice or a few slices of bread – in the spring hunger of 1960, the public dining hall grain ration in Da Fo was a quarter of the daily ration during the killer Madras Famine in India of 1877. Yet most people in Da Fo survived the ensuing terrible year of the Great Leap Forward Famine. If grain concealment, the black market, and gleaning rights were all but eliminated and if the Liangmen People's Commune and Da Fo party leaders had usurped the household entitlements of the past, such as selling off family land and property to purchase food or seeking hunger loans from landlord patrons, how did villagers escape death?
China's rural people, including the tillers of Da Fo, avoided losing all of their crops to state procurement during the Great Leap famine by eating the crops of the collective before the harvest. People from all three of Da Fo's harvest companies say that 90 percent of their members survived primarily by relying on chi qing, as villagers call the practice of eating immature or unripe crops. This means that if we focus mainly on the amount of the harvest taken by commune officials after the harvest was reaped rather than the struggle over the harvest within the fields of the collective, we cannot grasp the most effective survival strategy when starvation threatened in 1960 and 1961.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Catastrophe and Contention in Rural ChinaMao's Great Leap Forward Famine and the Origins of Righteous Resistance in Da Fo Village, pp. 199 - 230Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008
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