Saturday, September 04, 2010

The Great Leap Backward

"Society completely unravelled. In the newly established communes, peasants following Mao's lunatic advice ploughed their paddies uselessly deep. They dismantled their houses to use as fertiliser, and melted down their tools to make the steel Mao had decreed was the mark of an advanced socialist country (after all wasn't Stalin 'the man of steel'?). Other peasants abandoned their fields and marched miles to work all night constructing mammoth water schemes that often came to nothing, while their families died without grain at home. The only reason millions more didn't starve, as Dikötter describes in detail, is because of their desperate ploys to steal food."

In Literary Review, Jonathan Mirsky reviews Frank Dikötter's Mao's Great Famine: The History of China's Most Devastating Catastrophe, 1958-62.

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