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Will the Boat Sink the Water?

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Will the Boat Sink the Water?

The Life of China's Peasants

Public Affairs,

15 min read
10 take-aways
Audio & text

What's inside?

China's peasants are impoverished, overtaxed and cut out of globalization's bonanza. How long will they agree to suffer?

Editorial Rating

9

Qualities

  • Innovative
  • Eye Opening
  • Concrete Examples

Recommendation

This short book should be an excellent antidote to the hype about China's economic resurgence and strength. getAbstract recommends Chen Guidi and Wu Chuntao's frank, unvarnished account of peasant oppression and misery. Since peasants are the majority of the Chinese population, the system described here is China's true governance. The accounts of peasants suffering under local officials' tyranny are unsparing and quite moving, but the book is particularly valuable for its insights into how weak and ineffective Chinese laws and regulations really are. At the local level, laws clearly mean little against political connections and power. The danger is that this disparity could provoke another revolution in China.

Summary

Martyrdom

Ding Zuoming was a peasant in Anhui, an impoverished Chinese province. His national examination scores would have admitted him to college if he had been a city dweller. However, a different standard applied in rural villages, forcing him to return to the miserable life of a Chinese peasant. Yet, Ding did not give up the life of the mind. He liked to read, thought things out and challenged authority - a fatal combination. Local bureaucrats in his village, like those throughout rural China, taxed the villagers arbitrarily, far in excess of the Communist Party Central Committee's orders. Ding decided to do something about the unlawful tax rate and the village leaders' apparent embezzlement of tax funds.

He and several other villagers demanded an audit of the village's financial accounts. The township's Party leader agreed that the taxes were excessive, but he exploded in anger, claiming that he did nothing other Party leaders did not do. Unable to get justice at the township level, Ding wrote a formal complaint against the village leadership and took it to the county seat. The county officials told him to wait to present it after the upcoming Spring Festival...

About the Authors

Wu Chuntao and her husband, Chen Guidi grew up in the countryside and moved to the city, where they joined the Hefei Writer's Union. They received the Lettre Ulysses Award for the Art of Reportage for their survey of the Chinese peasantry. Chen, also a member of the Chinese Writer's Union, received the Lu Xun Literary Achievement Award.


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