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Mao’s People

Sixteen Portraits of Life in Revolutionary China

B Michael Frolic author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Harvard University Press

Published:15th Oct '81

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Mao’s People cover

"How do we apply Chairman Mao's Thought to get fat pigs?" Squad Leader Ho (who knew the most about pigs) replied that, according to Chairman Mao, one must investigate the problem fully from all sides, and then integrate practice and theory. Ho concluded that the reason for our skinny pigs had to be found in one of three areas: the relationship between the pigs and their natural environment (excluding man); the relationship between the cadres and the pigs; and the relationship among the pigs themselves.

And so the city slickers, sent down to the countryside for political reeducation, set out to find the Thousand-Dollar Pig, much to the bemusement of the local peasants.

The sixteen stories collected in this remarkable book give firsthand accounts of daily life in contemporary China. From 250 interviews conducted in Hong Kong between 1972 and 1976, Mr. Frolic has created charming vignettes that show how individuals from all parts of China led their lives in the midst of rapid social change and political unrest. We hear about oil prospectors, rubber growers, and factory workers, Widow Wang and her sit-in to get a larger apartment, the thoroughly corrupt Man Who Loved Dog Meat, the young people who flew kites to protest antidemocratic tendencies.

As fresh and original as the individual accounts are, common and timeless themes emerge: the sluggishness of an agrarian society in responding to modernization; the painful lack of resources in a poor and gigantic country; the constraints imposed on common people by the bureaucracy; the way in which individuals outwardly support the system and inwardly resist it; the limitations of heavy and conflicting doses of ideology in motivating individuals.

But there are also recurrent motifs of economic and social progress: production rises, illiteracy declines, and socialist values have impact. A new China has emerged, though change is occurring far more slowly than its leaders had intended.

Mao's People contains much new information on China both for the general reader and for specialists in the field. Above all, it is a completely engrossing and vivid glimpse into the ways of a nation we are only beginning to discover.

Often touching and sometimes funny, rich in anecdotes... it's a book about coping and surviving, about wangling and finagling and getting on in the revolution... these painstakingly recorded narratives are the most telling bits of self-expression from Mao's China that we have had. * New York Times *
Skillfully edited... One possibly learns more about the social and psychological realities of China from the words of the survivors themselves than from any other recent book. Protected by anonymity, the informants are candid, devastating, and funny. * New York Times Book Review *
For those who wish to gain a sense of the diversity and divisiveness of Chinese life between 1966 and 1974, this book is invaluable... Altogether, these portraits are so fresh, so poignant, and so exquisitely 'human' that after finishing this absorbing book one feels like one of Frolic's informants who, looking back on his life in the 'motherland,' doesn't know whether to laugh or cry. * New Republic *

ISBN: 9780674548459

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 431g

291 pages