Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rcrh6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T00:49:07.910Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Revolutionary Women and Women in the Revolution: The Chinese Communist Party and Women in the War of Resistance to Japan, 1937–1945*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 February 2009

Extract

On a late winter's day in 1989 a grey-haired, round woman of about 80 in a padded jacket and a black beanie moved across 1st May Square in the centre of Taiyuan, the capital of Shanxi province. She was presenting awards to the PLA's most recent young “model soldiers” – recruits who had just finished top of their class in basic training. This was Balu mama – the “Mother of the Eighth Route Army,” Bao Lianzi. Now the retired head of a clinic, 50 years earlier she had been part of a women's support group for soldiers during the War of Resistance to Japan, in her native Wuxiang. At that time, Wuxiang, together with Liaoxian and Licheng counties in South-east Shanxi, and Shexian in Northern Henan, was the core of the Taihang Base Area, itself the centre of the Shanxi-Hebei-Shandong-Henan Border Region and one of the major base areas behind Japanese lines. It supported the field headquarters of the Eighth Route Army under Peng Dehuai; the offices of the North China Bureau under Yang Shangkun; and Deng Xiaoping, eyes and ears for Mao Zedong on the front line.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 2000

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1. Report of an interview detailing with part of her life and work may be found in Zhikuan, Li and Ruzhen, Song, “Balu mama” (“Mother of the Eighth Route Army”), in Zhonggong Wuxiang xianwei xuanchuanbu and Zhonggong Wuxiang xianwei dangshi bangongshi (ed.), Wuxiang fenghuo (The Flames of War in Wuxiang) (Licheng: Licheng CCP Committee, 1985), Vol. 1, p. 535.Google Scholar

2. Though now somewhat confusingly Shexian is in South-west Hebei. Boundaries were adjusted after the end of the War of Resistance to Japan in 1945.

3. The Taihang Base Area, particularly in the form of the base area committee of the CCP, went through a number of different name changes during 1937–45. For the sake of convenience and clarity all will be referred to by the name that applied at the end of the war: the Taihang Base Area.

4. Goodman, David S.G.JinJiLu Yu in the Sino-Japanese War: the border region and the border region government,” The China Quarterly, No. 140 (12 1994), p. 1007.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

5. Shanxi sheng shizhi yanjiuyuan (ed.), Zhongguo gongchandang Shanxi lishi dashijisu (1976.10–1992.12) (CCP Historical Record of Events in Shanxi, October 1976-December 1992) (Taiyuan: Shanxi renmin chubanshe, 1995), pp. 298–99.Google Scholar

6. The activities of the Taihang Base Area had been more publicly celebrated than most other base areas outside Yan'an between 1949 and the mid-1960s. However, its reputation was always sidelined by Mao Zedong's vision of CCP history, and became completely submerged from 1965 until the late 1980s. On the historiography of the North China base areas, see Chongyi, Feng and Goodman, David S.G. “Explaining revolution,” in Chongyi, Feng and Goodman, David S.G. (eds.), North China at War: The Social Ecology of Revolution, 1937–1945 (Latham: Rowman & Littlefield, 2000)Google Scholar. Probably the two best known publications about the Taihang Base Area from the 1950s and 1960s are: Wu, Qi, Yige geming genjudi de chengzhang: KangRi zhanzheng he jiefang zhanzheng shiqi de JinJiLuYu Bianqu gaikuang (The Transformation of a Revolutionary Base Area: An Outline of the Shanxi-Hebei-Shandong-Henan Border Region during the War of Resistance and the War of Liberation) (Beijing: Renmin chubanshe, 1957)Google Scholar; and Taihang renjia (Taihang People) (Beijing: Zhongguo qingnian chubanshe, 1964).Google Scholar

7. Youru, TianTaihang kangRi genjudi shi yanjiu songshu” (“Research on the history of the Taihang Anti-Japanese Base Area”), Dangshi tongxun (Newsletter on Party History), No. 353 (No. 7, 1987), p. 39.Google Scholar

8. Zhonggong Wuxiang xianwei xuanchuanbu and Zhonggong Wuxiang xianwei dangshi yanjiushi (ed.), Kang Ri zhanzheng zhongde Wuxiang (Wuxiang in the Anti-Japanese War) (Zhonggong Wuxiang, 1985), p. 3.Google Scholar

9. See, for example: Taihang geming genjudishi zongbian weihui (ed.), Qunzhong yundong (The Mass Movement) Taihang geming genjudi shiliao congshu No.7 (Taiyuan: Shanxi renmin chubanshe, 1989), especially pp. 409471.Google Scholar

10. Liu Hulan is of course considerably and nationally better known. However, her heroism was from the Civil War.

11. The most comprehensive account of this period is van Slyke, Lyman “The Chinese Communist Movement during the Sino-Japanese War, 1937–45,” in The Cambridge History of China, Vol. 13, Republican China, 1912–1949, Part II (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986), ch. 12, p. 609CrossRefGoogle Scholar. For an example of such comments in a recently-published study of a specific base area, see: Keating, Pauline B, Two Revolutions: Village Reconstruction and the Cooperative Movement in Northern Shaanxi 1934–1945 (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1997), pp. 67.Google Scholar

12. Chang-ming, Hua, La condition feminine et les communistes chinoises en action: Yan'an, 1935–1946 (Paris: Éditions de l'Ecole des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, 1981)Google Scholar; Stranahan, Patricia, Yan'an Women and the Communist Party (Berkeley: University of California, Institute of East Asian Studies, 1983).Google Scholar

13. Kazuko, Ono, Chinese Women in a Century of Revolution, 1850–1950 (edited by Fogel, Joshua A) (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1989 (original publication, 1978), pp. 161170.Google Scholar

14. Croll, Elisabeth, Feminism and Socialism in China (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1978), pp. 185222Google Scholar; Davin, Delia, “Women in the liberated areas,” in Young, Marilyn B. (ed.). Women in China (Michigan: University of Michigan Papers in Chinese Studies, 1973), pp. 7387Google Scholar; Stacey, Judith, Patriarchy and Socialist Revolution in China (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1983), pp. 108157.Google Scholar

15. Johnson, Kay Ann, Women, the Family, and Peasant Revolution in China (Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1983), pp. 6383.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

16. See, for example, and in addition to the already cited sources: Andors, Phyllis, The Unfinished Revolution of Chinese Women (Indiana: Indiana University Press, 1983), pp. 23 ffGoogle Scholar; and Davin, Delia, Woman-Work: Women and the Party in Revolutionary China (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1976), pp. 32 ff.Google Scholar

17. Johnson, , Women, the Family, and Peasant Revolution, p. 65Google Scholar. See, also, more generally, Davin, “Women in the liberated areas,” pp. 7387Google Scholar; and Croll, , Feminism and Socialism, pp. 202 ff.Google Scholar

18. Smedley, Agnes, Battle Hymn of China (London: Gollancz, 1943)Google Scholar, “The women take a hand,” pp. 190 ffGoogle Scholar; Snow, Helen Foster (Nym Wales), The Chinese Communists: Sketches and Autobiographies of the Old Guard (Westport, CN: Greenwood, 1972)Google Scholar, Part 7 Women, pp. 199266.Google Scholar

19. Gilmartin, Christina Kelley, Engendering the Chinese Revolution: Radical Women, Communist Politics, and Mass Movements in the 1920s (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1995).Google Scholar

20. Stacey, Judith, Patriarchy and Socialist Revolution in China (Berkeley University of California Press, 1983), pp. 154–55.Google Scholar

21. Selden, Mark, China in Revolution: The Yenan Way Revisited (New York: ME. Sharpe, 1995)Google Scholar; Feng, and Goodman, , North China at War.Google Scholar

22. In the Taihang Base Area, for example, the original organizational genesis of its civilian structures was the Beiping-Wuhan Railway CCP Committee which sent 31 activists, all male, to the region at the start of the war. They recruited several hundred other urban intellectuals, including many teachers, and formed the backbone of the CCP's organization to the end of the war. As Li Xuefeng, the ranking CCP secretary for the Taihang Base Area for all but a couple of months of the war, pointed out: “Many leading cadres are urban intellectuals. When they first came they knew little about the rural areas and the peasants, and nothing about peasants, peasant cadres or worker-peasant cadres.” It was a heady mix: “Whether deliberately or not, they hurt the peasants and local cadres through their city views and absolutist interpretations of Marxism.” Reported verbatim, in qudangwei, Zhonggong Taihang, Taihang quwei diliuci zuzhihui jilu (Minutes of the Sixth Organizational Conference of the Taihang Region Party Committee), 0203 1945, 8 03 1945, 8 03 1945, p. 67Google Scholar. For further information on the social composition of the Taihang CCP, see Goodman, David S.G., Social and Political Change in Revolutionary China: The Taihang Base Area in the War of Resistance to Japan, 1937–1945 (New York: Rowman & Littlefield, 2000Google Scholar, especially ch.1, “Base area and border region.”

23. Teiwes, Frederick C. and Sun, Warren, “From a Leninist to a charismatic party: the CCP's changing leadership, 1937–1945,” in Saich, Tony and van de Ven, Hans (eds.), New Perspectives on the Chinese Communist Revolution (New York: M.E. Sharpe, 1995), p. 339.Google Scholar

24. Dehuai, Peng “Huabei genjudi gongzuo baogao” (“Report on work in the North China Base Areas”), 03 1942Google Scholar, in Gongfei huoguo shiliao leibian (Collection of Historical Materials on the Communist Bandits) (Taipei: Zhonghua minguo guoji guanxi yanjiusuo, 1961), Vol. 3, pp. 380–82.Google Scholar

25. On socio-economic conditions in comparative perspective, see Youru, Tian, “Shanxi tudi zhidu gaige lishi gaiyao” (“Outline history of reform of the land system in Shanxi”), Shanxi dangshi tongxun (Bulletin of Shanxi Party History), No. 2 (1993), p. 17Google Scholar; Huang, Philip C.C.Rural class struggle in the Chinese revolution: representational and objective realities from the land reform to the Cultural Revolution,” Modern China, Vol. 21, No.1 (01 1995), p. 105CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Xiangqian, Li “Kang Ri zhanzheng yu Zhongguo Xibei nongeun shehuide biandong” (“The transformation of village society in North-west China during the War of Resistance”), in Chongyi, Feng and Deman, Gu (eds.), Huabei Kang Ri genjudi yu shehui shengtai (The Social Ecology of the North China Base Areas in the War of Resistance) (Beijing: Dangdai Zhongguo chubanshe, 1998), p. 25.Google Scholar

26. Shengbo, Wang, Ximenghui shi (History of the Sacrifice League) (Taiyuan: Shanxi renmin chubanshe, 1987)Google Scholar; and Gillin, Donald G., Warlord Yen Hsi-shan in Shansi Province, 1911–1949 (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1967), pp. 231 ff.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

27. Bo Yibo was the leader of the “Open” Shanxi Provincial Committee of the CCP, and had made the arrangements with Yan Xishan that led to the establishment of the Sacrifice League.

28. Taihang geming genjudishi zongbian weihui (ed.), Taihang geming genjudi shigao (Outline History of the Taihang Revolutionary Base Area) (Taiyuan: Shanxi renmin chubanshe, 1987), pp. 134–36.Google Scholar

29. This figure excludes CCP members serving in the Eighth Route Army or offices of the North China Bureau of the CCP based in the Taihang Base Area.

30. Zhonggong JinJiYu qudangwei, “Zuzhi gongzuo baogao” (“Report on organization work”), 1 08 1941Google Scholar, in danganguan, Shanxisheng (ed.), Taihang dangshi ziliao huibian (Collection of Materials on the History of the Party in the Taihang Base Area) (Taiyuan: Shanxi renmin chubanshe, 1994), Vol. 4, 1941, p. 544–46.Google Scholar

31. Isabel, and Crook, David, Revolution in a Chinese Village: Ten Mile Inn (London: Routledge, 1959), p. 7.Google Scholar

32. Huang, “Rural class struggle,” p. 114.Google Scholar

33. Wei, Yang “Taihangshan beiqude tudi wenti” (“Land issues in the northern part of the Taihang Mountains”), 05 1940Google Scholar, in danganguan, Shanxisheng, Collection of Materials, Vol.3, 1940, p. 311.Google Scholar

34. Zhonggong JinJiYu qudangwei “Guanyu Wuxiang gongzuode yijian” (“Opinions on Wuxiang's Work”), 07 1940Google Scholar, in danganguan, Shanxisheng, Collection of Materials, Vol. 3, 1940, p. 509.Google Scholar

35. Youru, Tian “Outline history of reform,” p. 4.Google Scholar

36. There are different versions of this same intent. See, for example: Zhonggong Shanxisheng Wuxiang xianwei dangshi yanjiushi, Zhonggong Wuxiang jianshi (An Introductory History to the CCP in Wuxiang) (Wuxiang: Zhonggong Shanxisheng Wuxiang xianwei dangshi yanjiushi, 1990), p. 3.Google Scholar

37. Taihang geming genjudishi zongbian weihui (ed.), Tudi wenti (The Land Question) Taihang geming genjudi shiliao congshu No. 5 (Taiyuan: Shanxi renmin chubanshe, 1987), pp. 8688.Google Scholar

38. Zhonggong Shanxisheng Wuxiang xianwei zuzhibu, Zhonggong Shanxisheng Wuxiang xianwei dangshi yanjiushi, Shanxisheng Wuxiangxian danganju (ed.), Zhongguo gongchandang Shanxisheng Wuxiangxian zuzhi shi ziliao 1933.8–1993.12 (Organizational History of the CCP in Wuxiang County, Shanxi, 1933–1993) (Taiyuan: Shanxi renmin chubanshe, 1994), p. 16Google Scholar; Sanyou, WuHuiyi zhongde nongmin kangzhaituan” (“Recalling the peasants refusal league”), in Zhonggong Wuxiang xianwei xuanchuanbu and Zhonggong Wuxiang xianwei dangshi bangongshi. The Flames of War in Wuxiang, Vol. 1, p. 63Google Scholar; Gillin, , Warlord Yen Hsi-shan, p. 229.Google Scholar

39. Yutang, Wang “Zhengdun huifu Wuxiang dangzhuzhi jianyi” (“A concise recollection of the resumption and restoration of the CCP's organization in Wuxiang”)Google Scholar, in Zhonggong Wuxiang xianwei xuanchuanbu and Zhonggong Wuxiang xianwei dangshi bangongshi, The Flames of War in Wuxiang, Vol. 1, p. 87.Google Scholar

40. Details from Lai Ruoyu's comments to Taihang Sixth Organizational Work Conference, 1 March 1945, in Zhonggong Taihang qudangwei, Minutes of the Sixth Organizational Conference, p. 30Google Scholar; and Wuxiangxian xianzhi bianji weiyuanhui bangongshi (ed.), Wuxiang xianzhi (The Record of Wuxiang County) (Taiyuan: Shanxi renmin chubanshe, 1986), pp. 667688.Google Scholar

41. Ibid. p. 303; Zeng Ke “Nu she ji shou” (“Women fighters”), in Shanxisheng Wuxiangxian funu lianhehui (ed.), Wuxiang funu yundong shiliao xuanbian (Selected Materials from the Women's Movement in Wuxiang) (Wuxiang, 1982), p. 130.Google Scholar

42. Taihang geming genjudishi zongbian weihui (ed.), Tudi wenti (The Land Question) Taihang geming genjudi shiliao congshu No. 5 (Taiyuan: Shanxi renmin chubanshe, 1987), pp. 2930Google Scholar; Taihang geming genjudishi zongbian weihui (ed.), Zhengquan jianshe (Political Development) Taihang geming genjudi shiliao congshu No. 4 (Taiyuan: Shanxi renmin chubanshe, 1990), p. 58.Google Scholar

43. See, for example: “Kang Keqing and Liu Zhilan nushi fangwen ji” (“Record of the visit by Kang Keqing and Liu Zhilan,” Xinhua ribao (Huabeiban) (New China Daily, North China Edition), 7 03 1939Google Scholar. Xinhua ribao (Huabeiban) was the newspaper of the Taihang Base Area and its organization later became Renmin ribao (People's Daily).

44. See, for example, articles from Xinhua ribao reprinted in Shanxisheng Wuxiangxian funu lianhehui, Selected Materials from the Women's Movement: Zhikuan, Li “Yingxiong muqin” (“Heroic mother”), p. 196Google Scholar; Fengru, Zhang and Zhikuan, Li “Geming mama Bao Lianzi” (“Revolutionary mother Bao Lianzi”), p. 205.Google Scholar

45. “Yijiusi'emian kaizhan xiaozuxiaoxi douzhengde dianxing ziliao” (“Typical cases of rent and interest reduction in 1942”), in Zhonggong Taihang qudangwei, Taihang dang shiliao biancun (Collection of Historical Party Materials on Taihang) (Huabei: Xinhua shudian, 1944), Vol. 1, p. 397.Google Scholar

46. Zhonggong Shanxisheng Wuxiang xianwei dangshi yanjiushi, Zhonggong Wuxiang jianshi (An Introductory History to the CCP in Wuxiang) (Wuxiang: Zhonggong Shanxisheng Wuxiang xianwei dangshi yanjiushi, 1990), pp. 158160.Google Scholar

47. Guishu, Ma, “Wuxiang dashengchanzhong lingdao yu qongzhong jiehede jingyan” (“The experience of unity between masses and leadership in Wuxiang during the Great Production Campaign”)Google Scholar, in Wuxiangxian xianzhi bianji weiyuanhui bangongshi, The Record of Wuxiang County, pp. 870 ff.Google Scholar

48. Zhonggong Shanxisheng Wuxiang xianwei dangshi yanjiushi, An Introductory History to the CCP in Wuxiang, pp. 140–43Google Scholar. See, for example: Yunsheng, Li “Fangzhi yingxiong Shi Liuxian” (“Weaving hero Shi Liuxian”)Google Scholar, in Zhonggong Wuxiang xianwei xuanchuanbu and Zhonggong Wuxiang xianwei dangshi bangongshi, The Flames of War in Wuxiang, Vol. 2, p. 520.Google Scholar

49. Information on leadership is taken from Zhonggong Shanxisheng Wuxiang xianwei zuzhibu, Zhonggong Shanxisheng Wuxiang xianwei dangshi yanjiushi, Shanxisheng Wuxiangxian danganju, Organizational History of the CCP in Wuxiang County, pp. 2888.Google Scholar

50. Jianping, Wen (Jian Ping), “Wuxiang shiyanxian shouci huodong fenzi dongyuan dahui zongjie” (“Summary of the Conference of Advanced Activists in Mobilization in Wuxiang Experimental County”), 25 04 1940Google Scholar, in Shanxisheng danganguan, Collection of Materials, Vol. 34, 1940, esp. p. 266.Google Scholar

51. Xuefeng, Li, Li Xuefeng huiyilu: Taihang shinian (The Memoirs of Li Xuefeng: Ten Years in the Taihang Mountains (Beijing: Zhonggong dangshi chubanshe, 1998), p. 113.Google Scholar

52. Zhonggong Shanxisheng Wuxiang xianwei zuzhibu, Zhonggong Shanxisheng Wuxiang xianwei dangshi yanjiushi, Shanxisheng Wuxiangxian danganju, Organizational History of the CCP in Wuxiang County, p. 90.Google Scholar

53. Jianping, Wen (Jian Ping), “Summary of the Conference of Advanced Activists,” p. 272.Google Scholar

54. The Shanxi Province Ten Year Plan prepared for Yan Xishan, and quoted in Zhonggong JinJiYu qudangwei Licheng kaochatuan, Li Gua Dao shijian diaocha baogao (Report of the Investigation into the Sixth Trigram Movement Incident), 04 1942, p. 3.Google Scholar

55. “Licheng xian” (“Licheng county”), in Guosheng, Xu and Ninghua, Chen (eds.), Shanxi xian qu jingji fazhan shilue (Historical Outline of the Economic Development of Counties and Regions in Shanxi) (Taiyuan: Shanxi jingji chubanshe, 1992), p. 231.Google Scholar

56. Licheng xianzhi bianxi weiyuanhui (ed.), Licheng xianzhi (The Record of Licheng County) (Beijing: Zhonghua shuju, 1994), p. 499.Google Scholar

57. Ibid. p. 501; Bu'an, Li (ed.), Licheng zhilue (Licheng Chronicle) (Beijing: Renwen chubanshe, 1993), pp. 477 and 485.Google Scholar

58. Huan, Liu “Licheng jiandang chuqide yidian qingkuang” (“A view of the early establishment of the Party in Licheng”), 4 01 1987Google Scholar, in Taihang geming genjudishi zongbian weihui (ed.). Dang de jianshe (Party Development) Taihang geming genjudi shiliao congshu No. 2 (Taiyuan: Shanxi renmin chubanshe, 1989), pp. 644 ff.Google Scholar

59. Zhonggong Shanxisheng Licheng xianwei zuzhibu, Zhonggong Shanxisheng Licheng xianwei dangshi yanjiushi, Shanxisheng Licheng xian danganju (ed.), Zhongguo gongchandang Shanxi sheng Licheng xian zuzhishi ziliao 1937–1987 (Organizational History of Licheng County, Shanxi Province CCP, 1937–1987) (Taiyuan: Shanxi renmin chubanshe, 1993), p. 56.Google Scholar

60. Yung-fa, Chen, Making Revolution: The Communist Movement in Eastern and Central China, 1937–1945 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1986).Google Scholar

61. The report on the incident was produced for the Taihang Base Area CCP as Zhonggong JinJiYu qudangwei Licheng kaochatuan, Report of the Investigation into the Sixth Trigram Movement Incident.Google Scholar

62. A fuller account of the Licheng Rebellion, including discussion of its religious aspects, may be found in Goodman, David S. G.The Licheng Rebellion of 1941,” Modern China, Vol.23, No.2 (04 1997), p. 216CrossRefGoogle Scholar. For discussion of its possible antecedents, see Naquin, Susan, Millenarian Rebellion in China: The Eight Trigrams Uprising of 1813 (Yale: Yale University Press, 1976), especially pp. 38 ff.Google Scholar

63. Zhonggong Shanxisheng Licheng xianwei zuzhibu, Zhonggong Shanxisheng Licheng xianwei dangshi yanjiushi, Shanxisheng Licheng xian danganju, Organizational History of Licheng County, p. 56.Google Scholar

64. Bu'an, Li (ed.), Licheng zhilue (Licheng Chronicle) (Beijing: Renwen chubanshe, 1993), p. 196.Google Scholar

65. Zhonggong JinJiYu qudangwei Licheng kaochatuan, Report of the Investigation into the Sixth Trigram Movement Incident, p. 59.Google Scholar

66. Ibid, includes details of interviews with three armed women participants, p. 67, p. 72, p. 81.

67. Zhonggong Shanxisheng Licheng xianwei zuzhibu, Zhonggong Shanxisheng Licheng xianwei dangshi yanjiushi, Shanxisheng Licheng xian danganju, Organizational History of Licheng County, p. 56.Google Scholar

68. JinJiYu qu funu qiuguo lianhe zonghui “Guanyu ‘Fandui maimaihun zhengqu zizhuhun’ de chubu zongjie” (“Preliminary summary on ‘opposing the trade in brides and striving to ensure freedom of choice in marriage’”), 31 08 1942Google Scholar, Taihang geming genjudishi zongbian weihui (ed.), Qunzhong yundong (The Mass Movement), Taihang geming genjudi shiliao congshu No. 7 (Taiyuan: Shanxi renmin chubanshe, 1989), p. 419.Google Scholar

69. Johnson, , Women, the Family, and Peasant Revolution, pp. 6869.Google Scholar

70. Zhonggong JinJiYu qudangwei, Liaoxian diaocha baogao (Report of an Investigation into Liaoxian), 05 1942, pp. 2733.Google Scholar

71. “Zuoquan xian” (“Zuoquan county”), in Guosheng, Xu and Ninghua, Chen, Historical Outline, p. 557.Google Scholar

72. Zhonggong JinJiYu qudangwei, Report of an Investigation into Liaoxian, pp. 1920.Google Scholar

73. Li Xuefeng was promoted after the war to become secretary of the North China Bureau of the CCP Central Committee, and then to the CCP Politburo at the start of the Cultural Revolution. He was removed from office in disgrace along with Chen Boda in 1969. Zhai Ying worked in the national Women's Federation after 1949. She died in July 1999.

74. Zhonggong Shanxisheng Zuoquan xianwei zuzhibu, Zhonggong Shanxisheng Zuoquan xianwei dangshi yanjiushi, Shanxisheng Zuoquan xian danganju (ed.), Zhongguo gongchandang Shanxisheng Zuoquan xian zuzhishi ziliao 1937.10–1987.10 (Organizational History of the CCP in Zuoquan County, Shanxi, 1937–1987) (Taiyuan: Shanxi renmin chubanshe, 1992), p. 89.Google Scholar

75. Zhongguo gongchandang Zuoquan xianwei dangshi yanjiushi, Zhongguo gongchandang Zuoquan xian jianshi 1937–1949 (A Brief History of the CCP in Zuoquan County 1937–1949) Taihang geming genjudi shiliao congshu (Taiyuan: Shanxi renmin chubanshe, 1995), pp. 5456.Google Scholar

76. Xiuren, Li “Wo liaojiede Liaoxian (Zuoquan) Heshun dangde jianshe he fazhan” (“Comments on the establishment and development of the Party in Liaoxian (Zuoquan) and Heshun”), in Taihang geming genjudishi zongbian weihui (ed.), Dang de jianshe (Party Development), Taihang geming genjudi shiliao congshu No. 2 (Taiyuan: Shanxi renmin chubanshe, 1989), p. 573.Google Scholar

77. Shufan, Zhang “Zai Zuoquan gongzuode huiyi” (“Memoir of work in Zuoquan”), in Taihang geming genjudishi zongbian weihui, Party Development, p. 584Google Scholar; and Zhonggong Shanxisheng Zuoquan xianwei zuzhibu, Zhonggong Shanxisheng Zuoquan xianwei dangshi yanjiushi, Shanxisheng Zuoquan xian danganju, Organizational History of the CCP in Zuoquan County, p. 13.Google Scholar

78. Ibid. after p. 95 and p. 122.

79. Zhonggong Shanxisheng Zuoquanxian dangshi yanjiushi (ed.), Zhonggong Zuoquanxian lishi dashijishu 1937.7–1949.9 (Historical Chronology of the CCP in Zuoquan County 1937–1949) (Taiyuan: Shanxi renmin chubanshe, 1993), p. 211.Google Scholar

80. Ibid. p. 34; Zhonggong Shanxisheng Zuoquan xianwei zuzhibu, Zhonggong Shanxisheng Zuoquan xianwei dangshi yanjiushi, Shanxisheng Zuoquan xian danganju, Organizational History of the CCP in Zuoquan County, pp. 1721.Google Scholar

81. The Liaoxian CCP's instructions exhorted the poor and the landless to implement “a complete and utter land reform … and to determinedly exterminate the landlords and rich peasants.” See “Liaoxian shiyanxiande dongyuan baogao” (“Report on mobilization in Liaoxian experimental county”), 10 1939Google Scholar, in Shanxisheng danganguan, Collection of Materials, Vol. 2, 1939, p. 666.Google Scholar

82. Yongbo, Yu (ed.), Nie Rongzhen zhuan (Biography of Nie Rongzhen) (Beijing: Dangdai Zhongguo chubanshe, 1994), p. 264.Google Scholar

83. Zhonggong JinJiYu qudangwei, Liaoxian diaocha baogao (Report of an Investigation into Liaoxian), 05 1942, pp. 58.Google Scholar

84. Ibid. pp. 140–41.

85. Zhonggong JinJiYu qudangwei, “Guanyu jiaqiang qunzhong gongzuode jueding” (“Decision on strengthening mass work”), 15 02 1941, in Taihang geming genjudishi zongbian weihui (ed.), Qunzhong yundong (The Mass Movement), Taihang geming genjudi shiliao congshu No. 7 (Taiyuan: Shanxi renmin chubanshe, 1989), p. 162.Google Scholar

86. Zuoquanxian gongshangke “Yijiusisinian shangbannian gongye yu shougongye zongjie” (“Summary of heavy and handicraft industry in Zuoquan during the first half of 1944”), 2 07 1944, in JinJiLu Yu Bianqu caizheng jingji shi bianjizu and Shanxi, Hebei, Shandong, Henan sheng danganguan (ed.), KangRi zhanzheng shiqi JinJiLuYu Bianqu caizheng jingjishi ziliao xuanbian (Collection of Materials on the Economic and Financial History of the Shanxi-Hebei-Shandong-Henan Border Region during the War of Resistance to Japan) (Beijing: Caizheng jingji chubanshe, 1990), Vol. 2, p. 268Google Scholar; Zhongguo gongchandang Zuoquan xianwei dangshi yanjiushi, A Brief History of the CCP in Zuoquan County, p. 243.Google Scholar

87. Ibid. pp. 242–44.

88. Ibid. pp. 247–48; Fuwei, Taihang, “Funu gongzuo chubu yanjiu” (“Preliminary research on women's work”), 4 10 1945Google Scholar, in Taihang geming genjudishi zongbian weihui, The Mass Movement, p. 434.Google Scholar

89. Zhongguo gongchandang Zuoquan xianwei dangshi yanjiushi, A Brief History of the CCP in Zuoquan County, pp. 265–67.Google Scholar

90. Ibid. pp. 247–48.

91. Ying, Zhai's comments at CCP Shanxi-Hebei-Henan Regional Committee, 5 09 1943Google Scholar, in Zhonggong JinJiYu qudangwei, Guanyu zhibu jianshe yanjiu de jige wenti (Several Questions from Research into Development of Party Branches), 30 09 1943Google Scholar, Minutes of the CCP Shanxi-Hebei-Henan Regional Committee, 5 September 1943, p. 54.

92. Zikang, Li “Taihang lao jiefangqu jiaoyu gongzuo huiyi” (“Remembering education work in the early-liberated parts of the Taihang Region”), in Taihang geming genjudishi zongbian weihui (ed.), Wenhua shiye (Cultural Affairs), Taihang geming genjudi shiliao congshu No. 8 (Taiyuan: Shanxi renmin chubanshe, 1989), p. 475.Google Scholar

93. Zhonggong Shanxisheng Zuoquan xianwei zuzhibu, Zhonggong Shanxisheng Zuoquan xianwei dangshi yanjiushi, Shanxisheng Zuoquan xian danganju, Organizational History of the CCP in Zuoquan County, p. 40.Google Scholar