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Across the Great Divide

Across the Great Divide

The Sent-down Youth Movement in Mao's China, 1968–1980

  • Cited by15
  • Cited by
    Crossref Citations
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    This Book has been cited by the following publications. This list is generated based on data provided byCrossref.

    Muscolino, Micah S. 2021.Transform the Land, Train the Youth: Water and Soil Conservation Teams and State-Induced Migration in mid-1960s China. Journal of Chinese History, Vol. 5, Issue. 2, p. 311.

    Brown, Jeremy 2021.Reluctant and Illegal Migrants in Mao's China: Civil Defense Evacuation in the Tianjin Region, 1969–1980. Journal of Chinese History, Vol. 5, Issue. 2, p. 333.

    Marichalar, Olivier 2021.Intellectuels empêchés. p. 107.

    Gao, Jia 2021.Sick Returnees among China’s Sent-Down Youth and Contemporary Chinese Practices of Identity Performance. East Asia, Vol. 38, Issue. 2, p. 139.

    Xu, Youwei and Wang, Y. Yvon 2022.Everyday Lives in China's Cold War Military-Industrial Complex. p. 15.

    Xu, Bin 2022.Historically Remaining Issues: The Shanghai–Xinjiang Zhiqing Migration Program and the Tangled Legacies of the Mao Era in China, 1980–2017. Modern China, Vol. 48, Issue. 4, p. 721.

    Baum, Emily and Lin, Zhuyun 2022.Maoism and mental illness: psychiatric institutionalization during the Chinese Cultural Revolution. History of Psychiatry, Vol. 33, Issue. 3, p. 293.

    Lei, Ting and Xie, Ping 2023.RETRACTED ARTICLE: Fostering Enterprise Innovation: The Impact of China’s Pilot Free Trade Zones. Journal of the Knowledge Economy, Vol. 15, Issue. 3, p. 10412.

    Perry, Elizabeth J. 2024.Blurring the Boundaries of Governance: China’s Work Teams in Comparative Perspective. Comparative Political Studies,

    U, Eddy 2024.“Good Samaritans” and Approaches of Resistance in the Cultural Revolution. Modern China, Vol. 50, Issue. 4, p. 413.

    Huang, Yanjie 2024.Transitional Frictions: Intimate Ties, Grassroots Bureaucracy, and Family Reunion in Post-Mao China, 1975–1985. Modern China, Vol. 50, Issue. 5, p. 641.

    Zhou, Dinghui 2024.Revising the Noir Formula in the Chinese Context: Black Coal, Thin Ice and Beyond. Arts, Vol. 13, Issue. 1, p. 12.

    Li, Yawen 2025.The Palgrave Handbook of Literary Memory Studies. p. 525.

    Kam, Stefanie 2025.The Evolution of Grassroots Governance in China: Home Visits by Work Teams in Xinjiang. The China Quarterly, Vol. 264, Issue. , p. 1054.

    Yun, Zou 2026.Power, Ethics, and the Practices of Naming in PRC Historiography. Modern China,

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    Book description

    The sent-down youth movement, a Maoist project that relocated urban youth to remote rural areas for 're-education', is often viewed as a defining feature of China's Cultural Revolution and emblematic of the intense suffering and hardship of the period. Drawing on rich archival research focused on Shanghai's youth in village settlements in remote regions, this history of the movement pays particular attention to how it was informed by and affected the critical issue of urban-rural relations in the People's Republic of China. It highlights divisions, as well as connections, created by the movement, particularly the conflicts and collaborations between urban and rural officials. Instead of chronicling a story of victims of a monolithic state, Honig and Zhao show how participants in the movement - the sent-down youth, their parents, and local government officials - disregarded, circumvented, and manipulated state policy, ultimately undermining a decade-long Maoist project.

    Reviews

    'A wonderfully nuanced and insightful study of China’s monumental Cultural Revolution campaign that sent millions of urban youths to the remote countryside. Based on a wide array of rich archival and interview sources, this is a first-rate work of scholarship that is also eminently readable. Highly recommended for academic and general audiences alike.'

    Elizabeth J. Perry - Harvard University, Massachusetts

    ‘Across the Great Divide changes our understanding of the sent-down movement and Mao’s China. Focusing on Shanghai youth sent to villages, the book documents not only their experiences, but also the connections and conflicts between them and villagers and between rural and urban officials and parents. The result is a remarkable new history.’

    Guobin Yang - University of Pennsylvania

    ‘This well-researched volume by Honig (Univ. of California, Santa Cruz) and Zhao (Univ. of California, Santa Barbara) seeks to probe how China's sent-down youth movement of 1968-80 was informed by and affected relations between state and society, and between city and countryside.’

    S. K. MaSource: Choice

    ‘Across the Great Divide will be of interest to not only scholars of modern China but also to a wider audience interested in understanding the dynamics characterizing one of the greatest social experiments of the twentieth century. Individual chapters will serve well as assigned readings for undergraduate courses, offering local perspectives on what the sent-down youth movement actually meant in practice.’

    Justin WuSource: Pacific Affairs

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