The Peasant Economy and Social Change in North China
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Stanford University Press
Published:1st Mar '88
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Winner of the John K. Fairbank Prize of the American Historical Association.
Presents a fresh interpretation of the origins and nature of the agrarian crisis that gripped the North China Plain in the two centuries before the Revolution. In this book, the author documents and illustrates the long-term trends of agricultural commercialization, social stratification, and mounting population pressure in the peasant economy.
The author presents a convincing new interpretation of the origins and nature of the agrarian crisis that gripped the North China Plain in the two centuries before the Revolution. His extensive research included eighteenth-century homicide case records, a nineteenth-century country government archive, large quantities of 1930's Japanese ethnographic materials, and his own field studies in 1980.
Through a comparison of the histories of small family farms and larger scale managerial farms, the author documents and illustrates the long-term trends of agricultural commercialization, social stratification, and mounting population pressure in the peasant economy. He shows how those changes, in the absence of dynamic economic growth, combined over the course of several centuries to produce a majority, not simply of land-short peasants or of exploited tenants and agricultural laborers, but of poor peasants who required both family farming and agricultural wage income to survive. This interlocking of family farming with wage labor furnished a large supply of cheap labor, which in turn acted as a powerful brake of capital accumulation in the economy. The formation of such a poor peasantry ultimately altered both the nature of village communities and their relations with the elites and the state, creating tensions that led in the end to revolution.
'Huang's book is extraordinarily rich, and I believe it to be the best sustained study of rural north China yet written.' Jonathan Spence, The New York Review of Books
ISBN: 9780804714679
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 594g
384 pages