Published by EH.NET (May 2008)
来源:http://eh.net/bookreviews/library/1315
Lillian M. Li Fighting Famine in North China: State Market and Environmental Decline 1690s-1990s. Stanford CA: Stanford University Press 2007. xix + 520 pp. $75 (cloth) ISBN: 978-0-8047-5304-3.
Reviewed for EH.NET by Pierre-Étienne Will Collège de France Paris.
In this long-awaited book Lillian Li offers us a masterful account of three centuries of environmental and socio-economic history in one of the core regions of China — the Hai River drainage that more or less corresponds to present-day Hebei the capital province since the Mongol period. Li's achievement is especially noteworthy when we consider the multiplicity of variables she addresses with equal thoroughness and clarity and combines into a convincing narrative of ever-mounting problems and tensions: the climate and natural environment models and techniques of agricultural production hydraulic engineering market organization and price movement dynastic and bureaucratic institutions political and military history and more.
As its ti
Such then is the narrative that Li unfolds in chapter after chapter making important methodological points along the way. She starts with an historical account of the natural environment stressing in particular that "what is important about the climate of the past or present is not that it directly causes particular social economic or social results but rather the way in which politics economy and society have adapted to the weather and other environmental challenges" (p. 37). Much of the book is a development of that notion. Chapter 2 on river conservancy — a particularly onerous task in Hebei — is subti
The next chapter discusses the relation among population land resources and agricultural techniques — already a hot topic incidentally in the early eighteenth century when the Kangxi emperor and his successor expressed much concern about population growth on a limited land ba
Chapter 4 on prices is of strategic importance to the narrative as Li uses the massive price data produced by the Qing system of economic monitoring as well as that of its Republican inheritors as a backdrop to the ensuing chapters on disasters and famine relief. She tackles brilliantly the considerable methodological problems entailed by the data: several sorts of grain were monitored the quality of the surveys was uneven the pricing system resorted to different currencies with a volatile exchange rate (official figures were in silver weight but ordinary people used copper cash) statistics used the traditional lunar calendar and finally in order to make real sense the curves created by connecting the dots representing the data — which have many gaps — need to be subjected to various statistical procedures. As the administration monitored not only grain prices but also the weather one major ambition of the book is to explore every possible correlation between the two. In the long term the secular rise of prices in imperial times appears surprisingly moderate despite steady demographic growth and increased pressure on natural resources. As far as the annual cycle is considered the system seems to have been made more stable by its very complexity ("multicropping with different seasonalities" p. 122); but massive state intervention in the form of organizing imports (the crucial role of Manchurian surpluses is stressed again and again) maintaining food reserves and providing relief definitely was the major stabilizing factor. After all the region under scrutiny was the metropolitan province of a vast empire therefore subject to special care on the part of the dynasty.
This theme is developed in the next few chapters on "Provisioning Peking" considerably qualifying the textbook image of a northern capital fed with southern "rice" transferred through the Grand C*** (Chapter 5); on the granary system seen as both "solution and problem" and the ob
The last famines of the Qing (beginning with the great North China famine of 1876-79) make the transition to the modern era. Unlike similar earlier events they were considered as "national" events by the philanthropic sphere newly emerging around Shanghai whose action was crucial even though as Li shows the state was far from being as absent as is often claimed. And they were "international" famines publicized overseas through diplomatic communication and missionary propaganda. Together with international (mainly missionary) organizations Chinese philanthropies which have been the ob
The impact of such infrastructural change is ***yzed with much subtlety in the important Chapter 11 on "Rural Crisis and Economic Change 1900-1949." To negotiate her way between the conflicting interpretations then as now of economic conditions in Republican China and their causes Li takes us on a tour of selected districts availing herself of the many well-informed local gazetteers published in the 1930s and showing that indeed the landscape was highly contrasted. Many places enjoyed new opportunities in terms of handicrafts (predominantly cotton goods) new commercial crops employment outside the region and so forth and there was an improvement in living standards (further favored by a steady rise in prices through 1931) despite environmental change and general poverty. While admitting that this cannot be described as a fundamental economic "break-through" (p. 340) Li takes exception to such notions as "economic involution" (Philip Huang) or "high-level equilibrium trap" (Mark Elvin) which have been widely influential in the field of Chinese economic history: there was a process of development at work but this was cut short by political and military turmoil.
The last chapter "Food and Famine under Communist Rule" which is perhaps less new takes us to quite a different world. But disasters were still there and at least one major famine actually the worst in the whole of Chinese history — the Great Leap famine. Li goes so far as to use the term "holocaust" (p. 359 following Jasper Becker's Hungry Ghosts) probably not the best one in this case; but indisputably this mostly man-made event would deserve the appellation "incredible famine" (qihuang) much more than the 1876-79 famine for which it was coined. The period after 1980 called "post-revolutionary" by many and marked by the "unleashing" of the market (p. 371) and a quantity of scientific inputs in the improvement of agricultural production — though the Chinese "green revolution" had already started in the 1960s — leaves us with ambiguous perspectives: while it is true that "at the end of the [twentieth] century prosperity for many people in China has allowed them to leave hunger behind" (p. 375) rapid urbanization and mounting problems with water availability and desertification not to speak of price instabilities remind us that this is not yet the end of history. Certainly Li's monumental work is a must-read for present-day planners and decision-makers.
Pierre-Étienne Will is the author of Bureaucracy and Famine in Eighteenth-Century China Stanford University Press 1990 (original French edition 1980) and co-author with R. Bin Wong of Nourish the People: The State Civilian Granary System in China 1650-1850 University of Michigan Center for Chinese Studies 1991. He is currently researching famine and the role of philanthropy in Northwestern China during the 1920s and 1930s.
Geographic area: Asia (2)
Time period: 17th Century (5) 18th Century (6) 19th Century (7) 20th Century: Pre WWII (8) 20th Century: WWII and post-WWII (9)
Subject: Agriculture Natural Resources and Extractive Industries (A) Economic Planning and Policy (E) Historical Geography (K) Markets and Institutions (W) Urban and Regional History (Z)
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