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Class Conflict and the Vocabulary of Social Analysis in China

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 February 2009

Extract

Western curiosity about the distribution of inequalities in contemporary China is not easily satisfied. The most obvious impediment to our understanding is that the government of the People's Republic does not publish even the most elementary social statistics, so that our efforts to gauge the shape of Chinese social stratification are by necessity impressionistic and often unsatisfying. The best recent assessment, offered in this journal by Martin King Whyte, draws upon an impressive (and an imaginatively motley) array of sources in support of well-reasoned, yet tantalizingly tentative conclusions.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 1977

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References

* An earlier version of this paper was presented to the Midwest Seminar on Modern China. Research support was provided by the East Asian Institute and the Research Institute on Communist Affairs (now the Research Institute on International Change) of Columbia University, and by the Center for Asian Studies of the University of Illinois.

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2. A brief description is in Kuochun, Chao, Agrarian Policy of the Chinese Communist Party 1921–1959 (Bombay: Asian Publishing House, 1960), pp. 122–24Google Scholar; A more detailed account is Hinton's, WilliamFanshen (New York: Vintage Books, 1968)Google Scholar;

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4. These of course are the opening words of Mao's, “Analysis of the classes in Chinese society,” and the first lines in the Selected Works of Mao Tse-tung (Peking: Foreign Languages Press, 1967)Google Scholar;

5. Among the exceptions were inhabitants of non-Han areas which were exempted from land reform, as well as persons in some districts where land reform was never carried out. See the “Revised later ten points of 1964,” in Baum, Richard and Teiwes, Frederick C., Ssu-Ch'ing: The Socialist Education Movement of 1962–1966 (Berkeley: University of California, Center for Chinese Studies, 1968), p. 110Google Scholar;

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7. T'ao Chu observed in 1955 that more rural Party members had risen in economic status than had non-Party peasants, a phenomenon which further limited the Party's incentive to reclassify the populace, for such a policy would have worked to the disadvantage of the Party's own rural cadres. See Chu, T'ao, “The great development of agricultural co-operativization in the new areas and the problem of guaranteeing quality,” Hsueh-hsi (Study), No. 12 (1955), p. 8Google Scholar; Note also Mao Tse-tung's “Introductory note to how the dominant position passed from the middle peasants to the poor peasants in the Wutung agricultural producers' co-operative of Kaoshan township, Changsha county,” in which he cautions that the Party's new interest in dividing upper and lower middle peasants is an analytical procedure, which “does not mean undertaking another differentiation of classes in the rural areas,” a fact which should be publicly explained to the peasants. Selected Readings from the Works of Mao Tse-tung (Peking: Foreign Languages Press, 1971), p. 427Google Scholar;

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13. An article in Hsrüeh-hsi magazine posed the question, “Must we still use the method of class analysis in handling contradictions among the people?” See the article by this title by Chih-ta, Wen in No. 12 (1958), p. 32Google Scholar; What is surprising is not the affirmative answer given, but the fact that such a question could even be raised. By 1962, as Mao was placing class again high on the agenda of the Party, there were open attacks on the applicability of the idea of class struggle. See Kahn, Harold and Feuerwerker, Albert, “The ideology of scholarship: China's new historiography,” in Feuerwerker, (ed.), History in Communist China (Cambridge: M.I.T. Press, 1968), pp. 23Google Scholar;

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18. Many shadowy areas have now been illuminated by Baum, Richard, in Prelude to Revolution (New York: Columbia University Press, 1975)Google Scholar;

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21. Most recently this is being acknowledged in China's English-language publications, where class names are explained for foreign readers. For example, a note in Peking Review, Vol. 17, No. 34 (23 08 1974), p. 15Google Scholar; explains that “The term ‘poor and lower-middle peasants’ used in our articles does not imply their present economic conditions but refers to their class status during the land reform.”

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27. See, for instance, Mao's, comments about Marx in Miscellany, pp. 99199Google Scholar;

28. And this is what the Soviet Party did. Note the derision of Chinese usages of class in “Open letter from the CPSU Central Committee to Party organizations and all Communists of the Soviet Union” (14 July 1963), in Griffith, William E., The Sino-Soviet Rift (Cambridge: M.I.T. Press, 1964), p. 310Google Scholar; This is perhaps why so much of Mao's theorizing is first presented to private forums, often never publicly published, or else transmitted to the public in somewhat diluted form.

29. This definition is Lenin's, which may be found in Cheng-yao, Kung, “Strengthening Party concept and accepting Party leadership,” Hung-ch'i, No. 1 (1 01 1970)Google Scholar; in SCMM, No. 672 (26 01 1970), p. 89Google Scholar;

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32. Writing Group of the Shantung Provincial Committee of the Chinese Communist Party, Adhere to the method of class analysis, correctly understand the struggle between the two lines,” Hung-ch'i, No. 13 (4 12 1971)Google Scholar; in SCMM, No. 719 (23 12 1971), p. 18Google Scholar;

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38. Quoted in “Never lose direction,” Peking, Ching-kang-shan (23 01 1967)Google Scholar;

39. This innovation has been given new theoretical depth in the recent discussion of “bourgeois right.” See Wen-yuan's, YaoOn the social basis of the Lin Piao anti-Party clique,” Peking Review, Vol. 18, No. 10 (7 03 1975), pp. 510Google Scholar; and Chun-chiao, Chang, “On exercising all-round dictatorship over the bourgeoisie,” Peking Review, Vol. 18, No. 14 (4 04 1975), pp. 511Google Scholar;

40. JPRS, 36435 (13 July 1966), p. 69.

41. The words are from Fu-chih's, Hsieh denunciation of this incident, in “Summary of proceedings of 13th plenum of Peking municipal revolutionary committee” (15 May), Canton Wen-ko t'ung-hsun (Cultural Revolution Bulletin), No. 16 (07 1968)Google Scholar; in Survey of the China Mainland Press, No. 4225 (25 07 1968), pp. 1213Google Scholar;

42. See, for instance, “The theory of family background,” by the Peking research group on family background, in Chung-hsueh wen-ko pao (Middle School Cultural Revolution News) (special edition) (02 1967)Google Scholar;

43. Mao, , Wan sui (1969), pp. 602603Google Scholar;

44. Quoted in Chang, Parris H., “Provincial Party leaders' strategies for survival during the Cultural Revolution,” in Scalapino, Robert A. (ed.), Elites in the People's Republic of China (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1972), p. 515Google Scholar; For an account of a similar effort to protect T'an Chen-lin in February 1967, see “T'an Chen-lin stirs up the ‘February black wind’ in the agricultural departments,” Peking, Chin-chun pao (Marching Paper), 20 03 1972Google Scholar; in Survey of the China Mainland Press, Supplement, No. 178 (18 04 1967), pp. 3536Google Scholar;

45. Chao-ch'eng, Feng, “How I learn the ‘dividing one into two’ viewpoint,” Hung-ch'i, No. 4 (31 03 1970)Google Scholar in SCMM, No. 680 (27 04 1970), p. 94Google Scholar;

46. Bell, Daniel, in Marxian Socialism in the United States (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1967), pp. 8285Google Scholar; discusses an American debate on family background prior to the First World War.

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