THE CHRONICLES OF JIABIANGOU (JIABIANGOU JISHI):
AN ANALYSIS OF CONTEMPORARY CHINESE REPORTAGE LITERATURE USING THE THEORY OF
TOTALITARIANISM AND POWER
AN ANALYSIS OF CONTEMPORARY CHINESE REPORTAGE LITERATURE USING THE THEORY OF
TOTALITARIANISM AND POWER
Abstract: The Chronicles of Jiabiangou (Jiabiangou jishi 2003), a contemporary reportage text about the sufferings of Chinese intellectuals in a re-education farm during the Anti-Rightist Movement and the Great Famine. By analyzing the plots and scenes described by the text, this paper will investigate how the book depicts the Chinese-style totalitarianism of the Mao era. Employing Hannah Arendt’s (1986) theory on totalitarianism, and Michael Foucault’s concept of the micro-physics of power, the paper also addresses how totalitarianism and political and social upheavals such as the Anti-Rightist Movement and the Great Famine, severely affected many individuals, (mainly intellectuals), by isolating, disciplining, punishing, and starving them via the system of laojiao (re-education through labor).
Keywords: re-education farm, laojiao system, totalitarian rule, Anti-Rightist Movement, Great Famine, microphysics of body
About the Author: Dr. Shenshen Cai has a broad research interest in contemporary Chinese literature, film, theatre and folklore studies. Her articles have been published or are forthcoming in journals such as East Asia: An International Quarterly, Asian Cinema, Asian Studies Review, and Asian Theatre Journal. Email:
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
< Prev | Next > |
---|