Heaven Cracks, Earth Shakes

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Heaven Cracks, Earth Shakes Page 29

by James Palmer


  4 Guard-dogs in Taiwan frequently used to be named Hitler, Stalin and Carter.

  5 Terrill, p. 343.

  6 Hua Guofeng obituary, Guardian, 21 Aug 2008.

  7 Now up to six. Rather confusingly, they started with the Second Ring Road; there is no First. Equally, Beijing’s subway lines go 1, 2, 4, 5, 8, 10,13.

  8 Xi’s comments were made during an interview with Global Times – http://special.globaltimes.cn/2010-09/571106.html – but the sections dealing with Tiananmen were censored in the final print version.

  9 Feng Chen, ‘Worker Leaders and Framing Factory Based Resistance’, in Popular Protest in China, ed. Kevin O’Brien (Cambridge, Mass., 2008), p. 89.

  10 Ye Yonglie, pp. 1146 – 53.

  11 I stole this line from the title of a paper by Jennifer Hubbert in China Review, Vol. 5, No. 2 (2002).

  12 The same linguistic shift happened in the former USSR.

  13 Naturally, it’s tightly linked to both of these. Petitioners are often attacked or imprisoned when attempting to expose local government corruption, and some towns are controlled by ‘black gangs’ that collude with the authorities to eliminate those who oppose them. I once asked an engineering student from Shandong why he was moving to Australia. ‘Because after my family bid against them for a road construction project, the mafia in my home town murdered my uncle by chopping off both his legs and leaving him to bleed to death on top of a building, then they had my father arrested for six months on false charges. So I decided I wanted to live in a country where you didn’t have to be a criminal to succeed.’

  14 http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2010/03/yu-jianrong-%E4%BA%8E%E5%BB%BA%E5%B5%98-maintaining-a-baseline-of-social-stability-part-6/ . This talk to the Beijing Lawyers’ Association is essential reading for anyone interested in protest, corruption and the Party’s attempts to maintain ‘stability’ in China.

  15 Louise T. Higgins, Xiang Gao and Song Zhu, ‘The development of psychological intervention after disaster in China’, Asia Pacific Journal of Counselling and Psychotherapy, 1:1, pp. 77 – 86.

  16 John Garnault, ‘Journey Through An Earthquake’, The Age, 9 May 2009. Garnault told me in personal communications that he and his fixer attempted to alert PLA soldiers to trapped civilians, and were ignored.

  17 William Foreman and Anna Cara, ‘China earthquake brings suspicion, relief corruption’, USA Today, 29 May 2008.

  18 http://www.chinasmack.com/2011/pictures/chinese-netizens-admire-japanese-post-earthquake-behavior.html.

  19 For a generally very well-acted film, it also has a jarringly awful moment when a ‘white guy’ actor shows up as the heroine’s new Canadian husband and gives the single most wooden performance I’ve ever seen, which prompted my fiancée to lean across and whisper, ‘She’s escaped the Tangshan earthquake only to marry a serial killer!’

  20 The film is available in its entirety on YouTube: see http://dgeneratefilms.com/critical-essays/controversial-earthquake-documentary-now-on-youtube/#more-3370.

  21 http://hansong.blshe.com/post/57/51231.

  Bibliography

  Journals and Periodicals

  The Age (Melbourne)

  Beijing Review

  China Youth Daily (Beijing)

  Global Times (Beijing)

  Liberation Daily (Beijing)

  Newsweek (US)

  People’s Daily (Beijing)

  Red Flag (Beijing)

  Shanghai Daily

  The Telegraph (UK)

  Time (New York)

  The Times (UK)

  Published Sources

  Aldrich, Richard, ed., The Faraway War: Personal Diaries of the Second World War in Asia and the Pacific (London, 2006)

  Baum, Richard, Burying Mao (Princeton, 1992)

  Becker, Jasper, Hungry Ghosts (London, 1996)

  Bonavia, David, Verdict in Peking (London, 1984)

  Chan, Anita, Madsen, Richard, and Unger, Jonathan, Chen Village: Revolution to Globalization (Berkeley, 2009)

  Chen Yong et al., The Great Tangshan Earthquake: An Anatomy of Disaster (New York, 1988)

  Cheng Guimin, Tangshanren zai Wenchuan [‘Tangshan People in Wenchuan’] (Beijing, 2009)

  Clark, Paul, The Chinese Cultural Revolution: A History (Cambridge, 2008)

  Col, Jeanne-Marie, ‘Managing Disaster: The Role of Local Government’, Public Administration Review (December 2007)

  Connolly, Matthew, Fatal Misconception: The Struggle to Control World Population (Cambridge, Mass., 2008)

  Crozier, Ralph, ‘The Crimes of the Gang of Four: A Chinese Artist’s Version’, Pacific Affairs, Vol. 54, No. 2 (Summer, 1981)

  Dai Qing, trans. Yi Ming, The River Dragon Has Come ! : The Three Gorges Dam and the Fate of China’s Yangtze River and its People (Armonk, 1998)

  Deng Rong, Deng Xiaoping and the Cultural Revolution, trans. Shapiro, Sidney (Beijing, 2002)

  Dikotter, Frank, Mao’s Great Famine (London, 2010)

  Evans, Humphrey, The Adventures of Li Chi: A Modern Chinese Legend (New York, 1967)

  Fenby, Jonathan, The Penguin History of Modern China: The Rise and Fall of a Great Power (London, 2008)

  Feng Jicai, Ten Years of Madness: Oral Histories of China’s Cultural Revolution (San Francisco, 1996)

  Friedman, Edward, Pickowicz, Paul and Selden, Mark, Revolution, Resistance, and Reform in Village China (New Haven, 2007)

  Fussell, Paul, Wartime: Understanding and Behavior in the Second World War (Oxford, 1990)

  Gao Wenqian, Zhou Enlai: The Last Perfect Revolutionary (New York, 1997)

  Gao Yuan, Born Red: A Chronicle of the Chinese Cultural Revolution (Stanford, 1997)

  Garside, Roger, Coming Alive: China after Mao (London, 1981)

  Guo Jian, Yongyi Song, and Yuan Zhou, A to Z of the Chinese Cultural Revolution ( Lanham, 2006)

  Heilmann, Sebastian, Sozialer Protest in der VR China. Die Bewegung vom 5 April 1976 und die Gegen-Kulturrevolution der siebziger Jahre [‘Social protest in the PRC: The April 5th Movement and the Counter-Cultural Revolution Movement of the 1970s’] (Hamburg, 1994)

  Heilmann, Sebastian, Turning Away From the Cultural Revolution: Political Grassroots Activism in the Mid-Seventies (Stockholm, 1996)

  Huang Yasheng, Capitalism With Chinese Characteristics (Cambridge, 2008)

  Jung Chang and Halliday, Jon, Mao, the Unknown Story (London, 2005)

  Li Zhisui, The Private Life of Chairman Mao (London, 1996)

  Li Zinfang, ‘Social Responses to the Tangshan Earthquake’ (preliminary paper, Delaware University, 1991)

  Lin Jing, The Red Guards’ Path to Violence: Political, Education, and Psychological Factors (New York, 1991)

  Liu Huixian, ed., The Great Tangshan Earthquake of 1976 (Pasadena, 2002)

  Louie, Genny, and Louie, Kam, ‘The Role of Nanjing University in the Nanjing Incident’, The China Quarterly (No. 86, June 1981)

  Lu Xing, Rhetoric of the Chinese Cultural Revolution (Columbia, 2004)

  MacFarquhar, Roderick, and Schoenhals, Michael, Mao’s Last Revolution (Cambridge, Mass., 2006)

  Mitter, Rana, A Bitter Revolution: China’s Struggle with the Modern World (Oxford, 2004)

  O’Brien, Kevin, ed., Popular Protest in China (Cambridge, Mass., 2008)

  O’Brien, Kevin J., and Li Lianjiang, Rightful Resistance in Rural China (Cambridge, 2006)

  Onate, Andres, ‘Hua Guofeng and the Fall of the Gang of Four’, The China Quarterly (No. 75, September 1978)

  Qian Gang, trans. Ellis, Nicola, and Silber, Cathy, The Great Chinese Earthquake (Beijing, 1989)

  Quan Yanchi, Mao Zedong: Man, Not God (Beijing, 1992)

  Rummel, R. J., China’s Bloody Century (New Brunswick, 1991)

  Sandschneider, Edward, ‘Political Succession in the People’s Republic of China: Rule by Purge’, Asian Survey (Vol. 26, No. 6, June 1985)

  Sang Ye, China Candid: The People on the People’s Republic (Berkeley, 2006)

  Schoenhals, Michael, China’s Cultural Revolution (Armonk, 1996)r />
  Shambaugh, David, ‘Deng Xiaoping: the Politician’, The China Quarterly (No. 135, September 1993)

  Shapiro, Judith, Mao’s War Against Nature (Cambridge, 2001)

  Shapley, Deborah, ‘The Maoist Approach to Seismology’, Science (Vol. 193, No. 4254, August 1976)

  Short, Philip, Mao: A Life (London, 1999)

  Solnit, Rebecca, A Paradise Built in Hell: The Extraordinary Communities that Arise in Disaster (New York, 2009)

  Speer, Albert, Inside the Third Reich: Memoirs (New York, 1970)

  Spence, Jonathan, The Gate of Heavenly Peace (Harmondsworth, 1981)

  Spence, Jonathan, Mao (London, 1999)

  Teiwes, Frederick, Politics at Mao’s Court (Armonk, 1999)

  Teiwes, Frederick, and Sun, Warren, The End of the Maoist Era (Armonk, 2007)

  Terrill, Ross, Madam Mao: The White-Boned Demon (Stanford, 2000)

  Thaxton, Ralph, Catastrophe and Contention in Rural China (Cambridge, Mass., 2008)

  Tong, James, Collective Violence in the Ming Dynasty (Stanford, 1991)

  Wakeman, Edward, ‘Historiography in China After Smashing the Gang of Four’, The China Quarterly (No. 76, December 1978)

  Walder, Andrew, Fractured Rebellion: The Beijing Red Guard Movement (Cambridge, Mass., 2009)

  Wang Youqin, ‘Student Attacks against Teachers: the Revolution of 1966’, Issues and Studies 37 (March – April 2001)

  Whiting, Allen, ‘China After Mao’, Asian Survey (Vol. 11, No. 17, November 1977)

  Winchester, Simon, A Crack in the Edge of the World: America and the Great California Earthquake of 1906 (London, 2005)

  Witke, Roxanne, Comrade Chiang Ch’ing (New York, 1977)

  Wright, Tim, Coal Mining in China’s Economy and Society, 1895 – 1937 (Cambridge, 1984)

  Yan Jiaqi and Gao Gao, trans. Kwok, Daniel, Turbulent Decade: A History of the Chinese Cultural Revolution (Honolulu, 1996)

  Yang, Benjamin, Deng: A Political Biography (Armonk, 1998)

  Yang Su, ‘Mass Killings in the Cultural Revolution’, in The Chinese Cultural Revolution as History, ed. Esherick, Joseph W., Pickowicz, Paul and Walder, Andrew

  Yang Zifa, The Great Tangshan Earthquake: A 30 Year Perspective (Newark, NJ, 2006)

  Ye Qing, Deng Xiaoping zai 1976 (Beijing, 1993)

  Ye Yonglie, The Rise and Fall of the Gang of Four (Beijing, 2009)

  Zhang Liang, Nathan, Andrew, and Link, Perry, The Tiananmen Papers (New York, 2001)

  Zhang Qingzhou, ‘A Record of Warning from Tangshan (Tangshan Jingshilu)’, Reportage (Baogao Wenxue), Vol. 65, 2005

  Zhang Yu and Lu Xin-An, ‘Shunkouliu as China’s Evidential Social Communication’, Studies in Popular Culture, 2003

  Zheng Yi, Scarlet Memorial: Tales of Cannibalism in Modern China (Boulder, 1998)

  Zhu Di Xiao, Thirty Years in a Red House: A Memoir of Childhood and Youth in Communist China (Boston, 1999)

  Online Sources

  Integration of Public Administration and Earthquake Science, the Best Practice Case of Qinglong County: http://www.globalwatch.org/ungp/qinglong.htm

  Chinese Posters, hosted by the International Institute of Social History: http://chineseposters.net/

  Marxists Internet Archive: www.marxists.org

  Index

  5 April Movement; see also Tiananmen incident

  Aftershock (film)

  The Age (newspaper)

  agriculture: and famine; ‘Four Pests’ Campaign; Land Reform (1949 – 51); policies

  Anhui province

  ‘Annals of a Nightmare’ (art exhibition)

  ‘The Answer’ (Bei Dao)

  Anti-Bolshevik League

  Anti-Japanese War

  Anti-Rightist campaign

  Ataturk, Mustafa Kemal

  Babaoshan Cemetery, Beijing

  Bai Yun (mayor of Tangshan)

  Banqiao dam disaster (1975)

  Baoding city

  Bei Dao, see Zhao Zhengkai

  Beida (Peking) University

  Beijing: Babaoshan Cemetery; building style; catacombs; ‘Democracy Wall’; destruction of historic sites; expansion of; Forbidden City; see also Tiananmen Square; Zhongnanhai

  Belgium, and foundation of Tangshan

  Beria, Lavrentiy (Soviet politician)

  Bohai Sea earthquake (1969)

  Boxer Rebellion

  Buried (film)

  ‘Campaign Against the Four Pests’ (1958 – 62)

  Cao Gaocheng (mining official)

  ‘Capitalist roader’

  Carter, Jimmy

  Central Committee Examination Group

  Central Military Commission

  Central Party Committee

  Chang Qing (photographer)

  Changchun city

  Changguo

  Changzhou city

  Che Zhengming (cadre)

  Chen Boda (politician)

  Chen Xilian, General

  Chen Xing (hydrologist)

  Chen Yi (politician)

  Chen Yi-Hui (mining student)

  Chen Yulian, attack on

  Chengde city

  Chengdu city

  chengyi (‘sincerity’)

  Chi Haotian (commissar)

  Chiang Kai-Shek

  China, People’s Republic of (PRC), agricultural policies; communications; compared with Soviet Union; economy; foundation/ early years; hukou (residence permit) system; income inequality; national anthem; and natural disasters; and politics; population and family planning; rationing; relations with US; relations with Soviet Union; unreliability of statistics

  China Youth Daily

  China’s Bloody Century (Rummel)

  Chinese countrysideignored by authorities post-quake, violence in

  Chinese culture: art/cartoons; festivals; film industry; heritage sites; language; literature; music; newspapers; poetry; and religion; ‘Scar literature’; shunkouliu (‘slippery rhymes’)

  Chinese people: aspirational items; character; and class division; and collective justice; comradeship of; embrace other cultures; impulse to rescue; mistrust of officialdom; naming convention; pastimes; and politics; protests; and rumours; slogans/sayings of; Stakhanovite cult of

  Chomsky, Noam

  Chongqing city

  Christianity/Christians

  Chung Kuo, Cina (film)

  ‘Class Teacher’ (Liu Xinwu)

  ‘Cleansing of the Class Ranks’ campaign

  Communism: ideologies; stamps out religion

  Communist Party of China (CPC); see also China, People’s Republic of; Cultural Revolution; Great Leap Forward and under individual campaigns

  Communist Youth League

  Confucianism

  ‘Counterattack the Right-Deviationist Reversal-of-Verdicts Trend’ campaign

  ‘Criticise Lin Biao, Criticise Confucius’ campaign

  Cui Zhiliang (miner)

  Cultural Revolution (1966 – 76): and civil war; criticism of; deaths during; desecration of religious sites; down to the countryside movement; and films; and Gang of Four; motivation for; nostalgia for; persecutions; prisons; suicides; see also ‘Cleansing of the Class Ranks’ campaign; ‘Criticise Lin Biao, Criticise Confucius’ campaign; Red Guard Movement

  Daily Telegraph

  Dao County massacre (1967)

  Daoism

  Das Kapital (Marx)

  Democracy Movement

  ‘Democracy Wall’, Beijing

  Deng Pufang (son of Deng Xiaoping)

  Deng Shuping (brother of Deng Xiaoping), suicide

  Deng Xiaoping: anti-Hua campaign; and communism; death; invasion of Vietnam; and Mao Zedong; propaganda campaign against; public support/popular appeal; purges; reforms; relieved of duties; rise to power; and the rule of law; slogans; and Tiananmen incident; and Zhou Enlai

  Deng Yingchao (wife of Zhou Enlai)

  Diaoyutai

  Dickens, Charles

  ‘Did the Tangshan Earthquake Really Happen’ (Han Song)

  Dikotter,
Frank (historian)

  Document 69, Central Party (1975)

  Douhe reservoir: dam damaged and saved, Tangshan earthquake; fish swimming to surface; Japanese construction aid

  Dragon Boat Day (festival)

  earthquake prediction: animal behaviour; atmospheric phenomena; and drought; foreshocks; limitations of; radon; by State Seismological Bureau; water levels

  earthquakes: awareness programmes; and Chinese building regulations; first seismograph; frequency in China; historical in China; Mercalli intensity scale; as omens/ portents; Richter magnitude scale; see also earthquake prediction and under individual earthquakes

  East Hebei Party Committee

  ‘East Hebei Spy Case’

  education: closure of universities; illiteracy; students exiled; teachers targeted by Red Guards

  Fang Jingqing (bookstore owner)

  Feng Chen (sociologist)

  Feng Chengbo (nurse)

  Feng Jicai (writer)

  Fenging, SS

  Fengnan

  Financial Times

  Flower Seller, The (film)

  Forbidden City

  ‘Four Pests’ campaign (1958 – 62)

  French Revolution

  Friedman, Edward (political scientist)

  Gang of Four; anti-Deng campaign; arrest; crimes; ideology; and Mao Zedong; naming of; plot to overthrow;; reactions to fall of; rise to power; as scapegoats; and Tangshan earthquake; and Tiananmen incident; trial; see also Jiang Qing; Wang Hongwen; Yao Wenyuan; Zhang Chunqiao

  Garnault, John (journalist)

  Geng Qingquo (seismologist)

  Great Britain, and foundation of Tangshan

  Great Leap Forward (1958 – 61): buildings weakened during; criticism of; deaths during; famine; granary raids; persecutions; policies; ‘Four Pests’ campaign; ‘Hundred Flowers’ campaign

  Great Tangshan Earthquake, The (film), see Aftershock

  Gu, Eric (mathematician)

  Guangdong province

  Guangming Daily

  Guangzhou city

  Guizhou province

  Guo Morou (poet)

  Guomingdang

 

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