One Industry, Two Chinas: Silk Filatures and Peasant-Family Production in Wuxi County, 1865-1937

One Industry, Two Chinas: Silk Filatures and Peasant-Family Production in Wuxi County, 1865-1937

by Lynda S. Bell
One Industry, Two Chinas: Silk Filatures and Peasant-Family Production in Wuxi County, 1865-1937

One Industry, Two Chinas: Silk Filatures and Peasant-Family Production in Wuxi County, 1865-1937

by Lynda S. Bell

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Overview

This book reopens and restructures the grand debate on the nature of economic development in China prior to the Communist revolution. It rejects the debate’s old contours in which quantitative data were used to argue that the trajectory of Chinese development was either “positive” or “negative.” Instead, the author combines quantitative analysis with a detailed study of local politics, culture, and gender to explain the shaping of the modern Chinese economy. Focusing on silk production in Wuxi county in the Yangzi Delta, the author argues that local elites used social dominance to build a silk industry continuum—“one industry”—fusing modern factory production with older patterns of peasant-family farming. The resulting social configuration was “two Chinas”—one populated by wealthy urban elites transformed into a new, silk-industry bourgeoisie, and the other by peasant families whose women became the workforce for cocoon production. The author describes the roles of merchant guilds and other elite organizations established to protect the silk industry from outside competition and excessive taxation; the methods and styles of elite networking and investment in building modern silk filatures; and the roles of women—elite women in sericulture reform and peasant women in silkworm raising. She also reveals the cooperation between silk-industry elites and Nationalist government officials in the 1920’s and 1930’s, which resulted in an industry that was virtually state-directed and designed to pass downward to the peasants the costs of building more competitive silk filatures. This discovery challenges the prevailing tendency to think in terms of radical ruptures between Nationalist and Communist rule.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780804780872
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Publication date: 09/01/1999
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 336
File size: 25 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Lynda S. Bell is Assistant Professor of History at the University of California, Riverside.

Table of Contents

Note on Wuxi County's Administrative Boundaries, Commercial Districts, and Sizexv
Weights, Measures, and Exchange Ratesxvii
1.Introduction: A Tale of Two Chinas1
2.Markets and Power in the Late Imperial Era14
3.Why Wuxi? Merchant Competition and the Changing Contours of Yangzi Delta Silk Production33
4.Public Sphere or Private Interest? Defending the Wuxi Cocoon Trade65
5.Investors at Risk in the Wuxi Filature Industry89
6.Women in Sericulture, or How Gendered Labor (Re-)Shaped Peasant-Family Production109
7.Imparting Modernity: Women and the Politics of Silk-Industry Reform132
8.Success at Last? Bourgeois Practice and State Intervention Under the Nationalists154
9.Conclusion: Peasants, Industry, and the State179
Appendixes
A.Interviews193
B.The Wuxi Rural Surveys200
C.Data on Investment Patterns in Wuxi Silk Filatures214
Abbreviations223
Notes225
Bibliography257
Character List273
Index281
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