Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rcrh6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T07:47:35.407Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Starvation amidst Plenty: The Making of Famine in Bengal, Honan and Tonkin, 1942–45

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2008

Sugata Bose
Affiliation:
Tufts University

Extract

Bengal is a vast cremation ground, a meeting place for ghosts and evil spirits, a land so overrun by dogs, jackals and vultures that it makes one wonder whether the Bengalis are really alive or have become ghosts from some distant epoch. And yet in the imaginative words of the poet, golden Bengal was once ‘well-watered, fruitful, abundant with crops.’ A garden of culture and civilization for over a thousand years … (Biplabi, 7 November, 1943, cited in Paul Greenough, Prosperity and Misery in Medern Bengal: the Famine of 1943–44, New York, 1982).

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1990

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

An earlier version ofthis article was presented as a paper to the India–China seminar at the Fairbank Center, Harvard University. I am grateful to the participants in that seminar, especially Roderick McFarquhar, Peter Perdue, Hue Tam Tai, Benjamin Schwartz and David Washhrook for their comments. I would like to thank my colleague Lynda Shaffer for cheerfully supplying me with numerous books and articles on Chinese history. I take responsibility for all those points on which the above have failed to rectify wrong-headedness on my part and for any errors that might have remained.

1 The full story of the Chinese famine during the Great Leap Forward of 1959–61 only emerged in the late 1970s. Estimates of excess mortality during this famine have ranged between 16 million and 29.5 million. See Ansley, J. Cole, ‘Population Trends, Population Policy and Population Studies in China’ in Population and Development Review 7 (1981)Google Scholar, and B. Ashton, K. Hill, A. Piazza and R. Zeitz, ‘Famine in China: 1958–1961’ in ibid. 10 (1984).

2 Moore, J. Barrington Jr, Social Origins of Democracy and Dictatorship: Lord and Peasant in the Making of the Modern World (Boston, 1966);Google Scholar laments, explicit and implicit, about the lack of an Indian peasant revolution analogous to the Chinese owing to the betrayals of the Indian bourgeois leadership can be found in the contributions of G. Pandey and others in Guha, Ranajit (ed.), Subaltern Studies I (Delhi, 1981).Google Scholar

3 Sen, Amartya, Poverty and Famines: An Essay on Entitlement and Deprivation (Oxford, 1981).Google Scholar

4 Eastman, Lloyd, Seeds of Destruction: Nationalist China in War and Revolution, 1937–1949 (Stanford, 1984), p. 68.Google Scholar

5 Sen, , Poverty and Famines, p. 55.Google Scholar

6 Long, Ngo Vinh, Before the Revolution: The Vietnamese Peasants under the French (Boston, 1973), pp. 233–8.Google Scholar

7 Sen, , Poverty and Famines, pp. 196202;Google ScholarGreenough, Paul, Prosperity and Misery in Modern Bengal: the Famine of 1943–44 (New York, 1982), pp. 299309.Google Scholar

8 Eastman in Fairbank, John K. and Feuerwefker, Albert (eds), The Cambridge History of China, Vol. 13, Republican China 1912–1949, Part 2 (Cambridge, 1986), p. 606;Google Scholar Eastman had suggested in an earlier study following Theodore White that ‘in March of 1943 … about five million human beings [in Honan] were “dead or dying” ’. See Eastman, Seeds of Destruction, p. 68.

9 Khanh, Huynh Kim, Vietnamese Communism 1925–1945 (Ithaca, 1986), p. 301.Google Scholar

10 Sen, , Poverty and Famines, p. 76.Google Scholar

11 Eastman, , Seeds of Destruction, p. 67;Google ScholarCambridge History of China, 13, 2, p. 605.Google Scholar

12 Young, Arthur, China's Wartime Finance and Inflation 1937–1945 (Cambridge, Mass., 1965), p. 300.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

13 Eastman, , Seeds of Destruction, p. 68.Google Scholar

14 Bose, Sugata, Agrarian Bengal: Economy, Social Structure and Politics, 1919–1947 (Cambridge, 1986), p. 88.Google Scholar

15 ‘Missionary tells of China's Plight’, The New York Times, 18 11. 1942.Google Scholar

16 On India, see Bose, Agrarian Bengal and Baker, C. J., An Indian Rural Economy: the Tamilnad Countryside, 1880–1955 (Oxford, 1984).Google Scholar On Vietnam, see Scott, James C., The Moral Economy of the Peasant: Subsistence and Rebellion in Southeast Asia (New Haven, 1976).Google Scholar The impact of the 1930s depression on agrarian relations in China has not been the subject of comparable studies but there is a mass of contemporary evidence in Institute of Pacific Relations, Agrarian China: Selected Source Materials from Chinese Authors (Shanghai, 1938, Arlington, Virginia, 1976).Google Scholar

17 This is argued persuasively in Greenough, Prosperity and Misery, p. 264.Google Scholar

18 The classic exposition of a ‘middle peasant’ thesis is to be found in Wolf, Eric, Peasant Wars of the Twentieth Century (New York, 1969);Google Scholar see also Alavi, Hamza, ‘Peasants and Revolution’ in Gough, Kathleen and Sharma, Hari P. (eds), Imperialism and Revolution in South Asia (New York, 1973).Google Scholar

19 Scott, , Moral Economy.Google Scholar

20 Marx, Karl, Capital, vol. 3 (Harmondsworth, 1981), p. 927.Google Scholar

21 For a more elaborate exposition of this typology see Bose, Agrarian Bengal, ch. 1.Google Scholar

22 Scott, , Moral Economy, p. 81.Google Scholar

23 Ibid., p. 79; see also Jeffery Paige, Agrarian Revolution: Social Movements and Export Agriculture in the Underdeveloped World (New York, 1975), pp. 278–333.

24 Scott, , Moral Economy, p. 78.Google Scholar

25 See Bose, Agrarian Bengal.Google Scholar

26 Huang, Philip, Peasant Economy and Social Change in North China, pp. 2932.Google Scholar

27 Institute of Pacific Relations, Agrarian China, p. 3. The precise definitions of the various categories are not made explicit in this article entitled ‘Land Ownership and its Concentration in China’. It does show, however, that the degree of land concentration was greater in south China than in the north, p. 4.Google Scholar

28 On copper coinage see ‘Chinese Copper Currency and the Peasantry’ in ibid., pp. 113–18; on the predicament of tobacco-growers see ‘Foreign Industrial Capital and the Peasantry in Honan’ in ibid., pp. 175–9.

29 Sheridan, James, Chinese Warlord (Stanford, 1966), p. 248.Google Scholar

30 Bose, Sisir K. (ed.), The Voice of Sarat Chandra Bose (Calcutta, 1979), p. 67.Google Scholar

31 See Bose, Agrarian Bengal, ch. 4.

32 Ibid.; B. R. Tomlinson, The Political Economy of the Raj: The Economics of Decolonization, 1914–1947 (Cambridge, 1979), ch. 2; Baker, An Indian Rural Economy, ch. 4.

33 Bose, Agrarian Bengal.Google Scholar

35 Scott, , Moral Economy, pp. 127–49.Google Scholar

36 See Latham, A. J. H., The Depression and the Developing World (London, 1981), pp. 61–2.Google Scholar

37 Nankai Institute of Economics, Nankai Index Numbers (Tientsin, 1934),Google Scholar cited in Gamble, Sidney H., Ting-hsien: a North China Rural Community (New York, 1954), pp. 252, 258.Google Scholar

38 Friedman, Milton and Schwarz, Anna, A Monetary History of the United States (Princeton, 1971), pp. 489–91;Google ScholarYoung, Arthur, China and the Helping Hand (Cambridge, Mass., 1963), p. 6;Google ScholarMyers, Ramon, The Chinese Economy: Past and Present (Belmont, California, 1980), pp. 174–7.Google Scholar

39 Brandt, Loren and Sargent, Thomas, ‘Interpreting New Evidence about China and U.S. Silver Purchases’, Journal of Monetary Economics, 23, 1 (01. 1989), pp. 3151.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

40 ‘Trade Capital and Paper Money in Chinese Villages’ in Institute of Pacific Relations, Agrarian China, pp. 157–60.Google Scholar

41 Ibid., p. 159.

42 Myers in Fairbank (ed.), Cambridge History of China, 13, 2, p. 265.Google Scholar

43 Ibid., p. 264.

44 Institute of Pacific Relations, Agrarian China, p. 178.Google Scholar

45 See Eastman in Fairbank (ed.), Cambridge History of China, 13, 2, pp. 601–8.Google Scholar

46 Ibid., pp. 584–92; see also, Eastman, Seeds of Destruction.

47 Sinha, N. C. and Khera, P. N., Indian War Economy (Calcutta, 1962)Google Scholar cited in Baker, , An Indian Rural Economy, p. 128.Google Scholar

48 Poduval, R. N., Finance of the Government of India since 1935 (Delhi, 1951), pp. 119–20.Google Scholar

49 Gadgil, D. R. and Sovani, N. V., War and Indian Economic Policy (Poona, 1943) cited in Sen, Poverty and Famines, p. 75.Google Scholar

50 Famine Enquiry Commission, Report on Bengal (Delhi, 1945), p. 217.Google Scholar

51 Ibid., pp. 28–9.

52 Sen, , Poverty and Famines, pp. 54–5.Google Scholar

53 Bose, , Agrarian Bengal, p. 89.Google Scholar

54 Ibid., pp. 90–4.

55 Sen, , Poverty and Famines, p. 56.Google Scholar

56 Bose, , Agrarian Bengal, p. 95.Google Scholar

57 Sen, , Poverty and Famines, p. 79.Google Scholar

59 The offer of rice from Southeast Asia was made by Subhas Bose in radio broadcasts to India. See note by R. Tottenham, Additional Secretary, Home Department, Government of India, 1 September 1943, in Home Political Files (National Archives of India) cited in Bose, Krishna, Charanarekha Taba (in Bengali, Calcutta, 1982), pp. 66–7.Google Scholar

60 Eastman, in Fairbank (ed.), Cambridge History of China, 13, 2, p. 584.Google Scholar

61 Ibid., p. 585; Young, Chinese Wartime Economy, p. 304.

62 Eastman, , Seeds of Destruction, p. 54.Google Scholar

63 Young, , Chinese Wartime Economy, p. 270, and pp. 299–305;Google Scholar see also Suyin, Han, Birdless Summer, pp. 293–5.Google Scholar

64 Young, , Chinese Wartime Economy, p. 325.Google Scholar

65 Eastman, , Seeds of Destruction, p. 48: see also pp. 49–68.Google Scholar

66 Myers in Fairbank (ed.), Cambridge History of China, 13, 2, p. 268; also Eastman in ibid., pp. 605–6.

67 White, Theodore and Jacoby, Analee, Thunder out of China (New York, 1946), pp. 172–7.Google Scholar

68 Ibid., p. 173.

69 ‘Mme Chiang asks Arms not Food; Says Ammunition is Great Need’, New York Times, 25 Feb. 1943.Google Scholar

70 Khanh, , Vietnamese Communism, p. 299.Google Scholar

71 Long, , Before the Revolution, pp. 130–2.Google Scholar

72 Khanh, , Vietnamese Communism, p. 299.Google Scholar

73 Ibid, p. 301.

74 Sen, , Poverty and Famines, pp. 67–70.Google Scholar

75 Bose, , Agrarian Bengal, p. 94.Google Scholar

76 Sen, , Poverty and Famines, p. 69.Google Scholar

77 Bose, , Agrarian Bengal, p. 95.Google Scholar

78 Sen, , Poverty and Famines, p. 101.Google Scholar

79 See White and Jacoby, Thunder out of China, and Long, Before the Revolution.Google Scholar

80 Greenough, , Prosperity and Misery, pp. 264–5.Google Scholar

81 Perdue, Peter C. and Wong, R. Bin, ‘Famine's Foes in Ching China’ in Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies, 43, 1 (06 1983), pp. 291332.Google Scholar

82 Bose, , Agrarian Bengal, pp. 181–5.Google Scholar

83 Greenough, , Prosperity and Misery, chs 4 and 5.Google Scholar

84 Sen, Amartya, ‘Family and Food: Sex Bias in Poverty’ and ‘Economics and the Family’ in Resources, Values and Development (Oxford, 1985), pp. 346–85.Google Scholar

85 On the Vietnam story see Long, Before the Revolution, esp. pp. 246–50; on China see Eastman, Seeds of Destruction, and White and Jacoby, Thunder out of China.Google Scholar

86 Kuan-chung, Lo, Three Kingdoms: China's Epic Drama (New York, 1976, translated and edited by Roberts, Moss), p. xxiii.Google Scholar

87 Famine Enquiry Commission, Report on Bengal, appendices.

88 Greenough, , Prosperity and Misery, pp. 270–1.Google Scholar

89 Bose, , Agrarian Bengal, pp. 219–31.Google Scholar

90 Greenough, , Prosperity and Misery, p. 266.Google Scholar

91 White, and Jacoby, , Thunder out of China, p. 171.Google Scholar

92 Ibid., pp. 177–8; Sheridan, China in Disintegration, p. 262.

93 Long, , Before the Revolution, pp. 233–8.Google Scholar

94 Khanh, , Vietnamese Communism, pp. 312–13; also pp. 301–2.Google Scholar

95 Ibid., p. 314.

96 Tai, Hue Tam, Millenarianism and Peasant Politics in Vietnam (Cambridge, Mass., 1983);CrossRefGoogle ScholarWerner, Jayne, Peasant Politics and Religious Sectarianism: Peasant and Priest in the Cao Dai in Vietnam (New Haven, 1981).Google Scholar

97 The distinction between attitudes to chronic hunger and dramatic famines in contemporary India and China is drawn in Sen, ‘How is India Doing?’, The New York Review of Books, 16 Dec. 1982,Google Scholar reprinted in Khan, Iqbal (ed.), Fresh Perspectives on India and Pakistan: Essays on Economics, Politics and Culture (Oxford, 1985).Google Scholar