
Eating Rice from Bamboo Roots
The Social History of a Community of Handicraft Papermakers in Rural Sichuan, 1920-2000
Jacob Eyferth(Author)
Harvard University, Asia Center (Publisher)
Published on 1. June 2009
Book
Hardback
335 pages
978-0-674-03288-0 (ISBN)
Description
This book charts the vicissitudes of a rural community of papermakers in Sichuan. The process of transforming bamboo into paper involves production-related and social skills, as well as the everyday skills that allowed these papermakers to survive in an era of tumultuous change. The Chinese revolution-understood as a series of interconnected political, social, and technological transformations-was, Jacob Eyferth argues, as much about the redistribution of skill, knowledge, and technical control as it was about the redistribution of land and political power.
The larger context for this study is the "rural-urban divide": the institutional, social, and economic cleavages that separate rural people from urbanites. This book traces the changes in the distribution of knowledge that led to a massive transfer of technical control from villages to cities, from primary producers to managerial elites, and from women to men. It asks how a vision of rural people as unskilled has affected their place in the body politic and contributed to their disenfranchisement. By viewing skill as a contested resource, subject to distribution struggles, it addresses the issue of how revolution, state-making, and marketization have changed rural China.
The larger context for this study is the "rural-urban divide": the institutional, social, and economic cleavages that separate rural people from urbanites. This book traces the changes in the distribution of knowledge that led to a massive transfer of technical control from villages to cities, from primary producers to managerial elites, and from women to men. It asks how a vision of rural people as unskilled has affected their place in the body politic and contributed to their disenfranchisement. By viewing skill as a contested resource, subject to distribution struggles, it addresses the issue of how revolution, state-making, and marketization have changed rural China.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Cambridge
United States
Target group
Adult education
Illustrations
12 halftones, 2 maps, 3 tables
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 156 mm
Thickness: 32 mm
Weight
658 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-674-03288-0 (9780674032880)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Jacob Eyferth is Associate Professor of Modern Chinese History in the Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations, the Department of History, and the College, University of Chicago.