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2 - Not All Quiet on the Rural Front

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 August 2019

Emily Honig
Affiliation:
University of California, Santa Cruz
Xiaojian Zhao
Affiliation:
University of California, Santa Barbara
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Summary

Chapter Two focuses on the difficulties of settling urban youth in remote villages. From the beginning, the sent-down youth movement was beset with problems relating to the gap between urban and rural conditions. The municipal government received a multitude of reports that urban youth experienced inadequate housing, food, and medical facilities, and that physical labor was backbreaking and potentially injurious for individuals raised in the city. This chapter calls attention to the perspective of rural officials who, completely unprepared for the arrival of urban teenagers, faced the overwhelming job of accommodating and managing them. Given the paucity of rural resources, sent-down youth often required provisions from the city. While youth were geographically distant from their homes, and may have bemoaned the loss of their legal residence in Shanghai when their hukouwas transferred to a rural production brigade, they maintained close connections with their families in the city, on whom they depended for both financial and material goods. Most importantly, their welfare was continually monitored and managed by the Shanghai government through the sent-down youth office and its teams of Shanghai cadres stationed in areas where the city’s youth were sent—the weiwentuan ???.

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Across the Great Divide
The Sent-down Youth Movement in Mao's China, 1968–1980
, pp. 40 - 64
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2019

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