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De-Industrialization in the Chinese Countryside: Handicrafts and Development in Jiajiang (Sichuan), 1935 to 1978

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 March 2003

Abstract

Rural industrialization is often seen as a characteristic feature of Chinese socialism, under both Mao and his successors. It is less often recognized that rural industrialization did not start from scratch: the pre-1949 Chinese countryside was already industrialized to a considerable degree, though most rural industries were unmechanized “proto-industries” – small-scale, decentralized, and household-based. Modernizing governments, including both the Kuomintang and CCP regimes, tended to see such industries as obstacles on their march towards industrial modernity, understood as mass production in urban factories. This article focuses on one particular industry, handicraft papermaking in Jiajiang county, Sichuan. It argues that Maoist policies, with their emphasis on local grain self-sufficiency, discriminated against communities that depended on specialized production and exchange. To the extent that these communities had specialized in crafts in order to compensate for an inhospitable natural environment (as was the case in many upland areas), Maoist policies penalized the already disadvantaged – with sometimes disastrous consequences.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© The China Quarterly, 2003

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Footnotes

I wish to thank Du Shouhu, Guo Xioming and Lei Xiaoming of the Institute for Rural Economy, Sichuan Academy of Social Sciences, for help and advice during fieldwork, and Frank N. Pieke, Claude Aubert, Mark Selden and Elizabeth Remick for helpful comments on earlier drafts.