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Communist Revolution and Peasant Mobilisation in the Hinterland of North China: The Early Years

Tiedemann, Rolf

Authors

Rolf Tiedemann



Contributors

Henry Bernstein
Editor

Tom Brass
Editor

Abstract

This chapter examines the depiction by populism in the domain of 'popular culture' of what purports to be its non-capitalist/non-socialist alternative: in short, the socio-economic and political structure of its 'imaginary' as this involves a symptomatic opposition between the utopic and dystopic. Using the pseudonym of Ivan Kremnev, the Russian neo-populist theoretician A. V. Chayanov wrote the utopian fiction The Journey of My Brother Alexei to the Land of Peasant Utopia. Accordingly, the utopic vision of Chayanov entails traversing time but not space; the protagonists in his narrative are projected forward into a future within the same demarcated space. Much of the populist discourse which structures the agrarian myth is present in the films of Frank Capra, who directed not only Lost Horizon but also Mr Deeds Goes to Town (1936), Mr Smith Goes to Washington (1939) and t's a Wonderful Life (1946).

Citation

Tiedemann, R. (1996). Communist Revolution and Peasant Mobilisation in the Hinterland of North China: The Early Years. In H. Bernstein, & T. Brass (Eds.), Agrarian Questions: Essays in Appreciation of TJ Byres (132-152). Frank Cass

Publication Date Jan 1, 1996
Deposit Date Dec 9, 2007
Pages 132-152
Book Title Agrarian Questions: Essays in Appreciation of TJ Byres
ISBN 9780714643328


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