1st Edition
Throwing The Emperor From His Horse Portrait Of A Village Leader In China, 1923-1995
By Peter J Seybolt
Copyright 1997
172 Pages
by
Routledge
176 Pages
by
Routledge
176 Pages
by
Routledge
Also available as eBook on:
This engaging book sketches an intimate portrait of the life of Wang Fucheng, an illiterate peasant who served for thirty years as Communist party secretary of an impoverished village on the north China plain. Based on conversations over a seven-year period (1987?1994), between Wang Fucheng and Peter Seybolt the book unfolds as a continuous first-person narrative, framed by the author's overview... Read more
List of Illustrations, Preface, Acknowledgments, Notes on Weights and Measures, Introduction: Houhua Village in Space and Time, Poverty, Bandits, and Japanese Invaders: Early Life, 1923-1946, Return to Houhua Village: Land Reform and Establishing a Family, 1946-1953, “We Will Have a Bright Future”: The Cooperative Movement and Joining the Communist Party, 1954-1957, “This Is Not the Way to Do Farm Work”: The “Great Leap Forward,” 1958-1960, “Five Winds,” “Three Togethers,” “Four Cleanups,” and Other Campaigns, 1961-1965, “At the Risk of Death, Dare to Throw the Emperor from His Horse”: The “Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution,” 1966-1976, Houhua Village After Mao: Prosperity and Future Prospects, 1977-1990, Retirement and Retrospective on Leadership, Houhua Village Under New Leadership, 1984-1990, Facing an Uncertain Future: Houhua Village, 1994, Notes, About the Book and Author
Biography
Peter J . Seybolt is professor of history and director of the Asian Studies Program at the University of Vermont.






