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The Marxist View of China (Part 2)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 February 2009

Extract

In the present context we need not trace in detail the changes Lenin made in Marx's socio-historical views on the eve of and after the revolutions of 1917. Having previously described Lenin's doctrinal engineering of institutional history in general and of Russian history in particular, I shall here indicate only the change in the image of China that Lenin initiated after 1917 and that after his death Stalin and the Chinese Communists completed.

Type
The Intellectuals (III)
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 1962

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References

106 Wittfogel, 1957, pp. 396Google Scholaret seq.; cf. also Wittfogel 1960 passim.

107 Lenin, , SW, X, p. 181; cf. also pp. 239 et seq.Google Scholar

108 Ibid. pp. 236, 237, 241.

109 Ibid. p. 242.

110 Ibid.

111 Ibid. p. 236.

112 One night three Chinese delegates—the leading Kuomintang spokesman, the topranking Communist representative, Chang Kuo-t'ao, and an official of a railroad workers' trade union—were invited to see Lenin in the Kremlin. The questions the Bolshevik leader asked expressed his primary concern in the establishment of a national united front in China (personal communication from Mr. Chang in Hong Kong in January 1958). Lenin did not attend the conference, obviously because of his deteriorating health. “Beginning with the winter of 1921 he frequently had to stay away from work” (Lenin, Vladimir I., A Political Biography. Prepared by the Marx-Engels-Lenin Institute. [New York: International Publishers, 1943], p. 265).Google Scholar

113 Der Ferne Osten: Der Erste Kongress der Kommunistischen und revolutionaren Organizationen des Femen Ostens (Moskau: 1922Google Scholar; Hamburg: Verlag des Kommunistischen Internationale, 1922), pp. 44, cf. also pp. 46, 50, 125.

114 Ibid. p. 126.

115 Bukharin, Nikolai, Historical Materialism (New York: International Publishers, 1934) (hereafter cited as Bukharin 1934), p. 123.Google Scholar

116 Bukharin, 1934, p. 121Google Scholar, italics in original. This passage appears in his Historical Materialism (Teoria istoricheskogo materialisma, written in 1919).Google Scholar But in substance his argument had already been made in 1915 in bis book, Imperialism and World Economy (see Bukharin, , Imperialismus und Weltwirtschaft, with a foreword by Lenin dated December 1915 (Vienna-Berlin: 1929), pp. 17Google Scholaret seq.). In his Historical Materialism Bukharin rejected Mechnikov's view. In this context he claimed that Plekhanov had criticised Mechnikov for “over-estimating ‘geography.’” Bukhara's statement is misleading. We recall that Plekhanov, while objecting to certain idealistic elements in Mechnikov's position, had praised his geographical approach, which led “to the same conclusions the Marxists came to” (see above).

117 Stalin, J., Works (Moscow: Foreign Languages Publishing House, 19521955), 13 vols., vol. viii, p. 374.Google Scholar

118 Ibid., IX, p. 244; cf. also pp. 245, 291 et seq., 294 et seq.

119 Ibid. IX, p. 229, cf. p. 244.

120 International Press Correspondence (English Edition) (Vienna-London: 19211938) (hereafter cited as Inprecor), year 1928, p. 1761.Google Scholar

121 In 1960 Boris Nicolaevsky told me that during bis last visit to the West (in 1936) Bukharin had expressed a growing interest in the “Asiatic” problem.

122 Diskussia ob Aziatskom Sposobe Proizvodstva (Discussion of the Asiatic Mode of Production) (Moscow-Leningrad: 1931)Google Scholar, passim; cf. Wittfogel, 1957, pp. 402et seq.Google Scholar

123 Stalin, Joseph, “Dialectical and Historical Materialism,” Chap. IV of History of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (Bolsheviks) Short Course (New York: International Publishers, 1939), p. 118, italics in original.Google Scholar

124 Ibid. p. 131.

125 Wittfogel, 1957, p. 408.Google Scholar

126 Osnovy Marksistskoj Filosofi (Moscow: 1960), p. 455.Google Scholar

127 Ibid.

128 Ibid.

129 Ibid. p. 375.

130 Ibid. p. 392, passim.

131 Ibid. p. 418.

132 To simplify the presentation I here follow the general usage and render feng-chien as “feudal.” However, I place the term in quotation marks to indicate that I believe it to be unsatisfactory even for the feng-chien system of Chou China, which quite clearly was a variant of the service land of Oriental despotism and not a fief associated with conditional and contractual feudal services.

133 Kung-po, Ch'en, The Communist Movement in China (An essay written in 1924) (Columbia Un., East Asian Institute Series No. 7, 1960), pp. 106110.Google Scholar

134 Ibid. pp. 117, 120. Cf. Chung-kuo Kung-ch'an Tang Wu Nien Lai chi Chu-chengchih Chang (The Political Programme of the Chinese Communist Party During the Last Five Years) (Canton: 1926), pp. 13, 19.Google Scholar

135 Hsiang-tao Chou-pao, Nos. 9, 10 and 11, 1923, 11 8, pp. 7476, 11 15, pp. 8284; 11 22, pp. 8992.Google Scholar

136 Ibid. no. 1, 1922, September [no day specified), p. 4.

137 Tu-hsiu, Ch'en, “The Bourgeois Revolution and the Revolutionary Bourgeoisie,” Hsiang-tao Chou-pao, No. 22, 04 25, 1923, p. 162.Google Scholar

138 Lenin, , SW, X, p. 236.Google Scholar

139 In this and the two preceding instances I have italicised the key word “patriarchal.”

140 According to the Stalin-Bukharin group, merchant capital was an increasingly important, but still secondary, force.

141 Inprecor 1926, p. 649.Google Scholar

142 Inprecor 1927, p. 230.Google Scholar

143 Inprecor 1927, p. 649.Google Scholar

144 Inprecor 1927, p. 232.Google Scholar

145 Tse-tung, Mao, “Chung-kuo ko chieh-chi ti fen-hsi” (“An analysis of classes in China”), Chung-kuo Nung-min, No. 2, 02 1, 1926.Google Scholar

146 Tse-tung, Mao, Selected Works (New York: International Publishers, 1954–) (hereafter cited as Mao, SW), 4 vols., I, p. 15.Google Scholar

147 Hsiang-tao Chou-pao, No. 191, 03 12, 1927, p. 2065.Google Scholar

148 Tse-tung, Mao, Hsüan-chi (Chin-ch'a-chi ed., no place: 1947), Hsü-pien, I, p. 33; cf. Mao, SW, I, p. 54.Google Scholar

149 Ch'en Tu-hsiu, who was demoted because of his “opportunism,” had been faithfully upholding the “feudal” interpretation of China. On May 6, 1927, the Fifth Congress of the CCP, headed by Ch'en, adopted a resolution on the agrarian question, which spoke of China's “feudal” relations, the “semi-feudal methods of exploitation,” “the remnants of feudal relations and patriarchal power,” the “feudalpatriarchal exploitation,” etc. (Chinese Correspondence, Wuhan, Vol. 2, No. 8, 05 15, 1927, pp. 26Google Scholaret seq.). The last public utterances of the Ch'en-directed party emphatically underlined China's feudal or semi-feudal conditions (see Hsiang-tao Chou-pao, No. 201, 07 18, 1927, pp. 22142217).Google Scholar

150 See Hsiang-tao Chou-pao, No. 18, 01 24, 1923, p. 147.Google Scholar

151 In October 1928 Trotsky, who was then in exile in Alma-Ata, stated that the Comintern leaders had withheld the political resolution of the Chinese November Plenum, because they were embarrassed by its combined opportunism and adventurism: They “not only did not publish it, but did not even quote from it” (Trotsky, Leon, Problems of the Chinese Revolution [New York: Pioneer Publishers, 1932], p. 216Google Scholar). But there was a confidential version of the resolution which “was published in a special Documentation, accessible to very few, printed by the Chinese Sun Yat-sen University (No. 10)” (ibid.). Trotsky's statement is not completely correct. Excerpts from this resolution were published in Inprecor 1928, pp. 121Google Scholaret seq. But the selection was slanted, and the full text of the resolution, like the text of other resolutions of the November Conference, was indeed withheld. In The China Quarterly, No. 2, pp. 32Google Scholaret seq., I published the passage of the Resolution on Discipline that ordered Mao's demotion.

152 Mif, P., Kitaiskai Revolhitsia (Moscow: 1932).Google Scholar

153 Inprecor 1928, p. 1459.Google Scholar

154 Inprecor 1928, pp. 1416et seq.Google Scholar

155 Inprecor 1928, 1249.Google Scholar

156 See above, note 120.

157 “Resolution on the Land Question” in Resolutions of the Sixth National Congress of the VCP, 09 1928, pp. 78.Google Scholar

158 See an earlier section of this article, The China Quarterly, No. 11, pp. 210.Google Scholar

159 See Awdijew, W. I., Geschichte des alien Orients (Berlin: Volk und Wissen Volkseigener Verlag, 1953), pp. 461 and 476.Google ScholarAwdijew, 's History of the OrientGoogle Scholar, which in its sections on China and on other Eastern civilisations describes the significance of government-managed water works, was used as a government-approved university textbook during Stalin's last years. See also Sbang Yuen's textbook on Chinese history, prepared under the guidance of the CCP, which frequently refers to hydraulic works and their relation to the prosperity and decline of dynastic rule (Yüeh, Shang, Chung-kuo Li-shih Kang-yao [An Outline of Chinese History] [Peking: People's Publishing House, 1954], pp. 16, 37, 45, 62, 66, 73, 116, 124, 168, 182Google Scholaret seq., 199, 209, 240 et seq., 270, 294).

160 See Mao's statement of 1939: In traditional “feudal” China “a self-sufficient natural economy occupied the dominant position. The peasants produced not only agricultural products, but most of the handicraft articles they needed” (Tse-tung, Mao, Hsüan-chi (Ta-chung ed., no place: 11 1947 [3rd printing]), p. 157Google Scholar; cf. Mao, , SW, III, p. 74).Google Scholar

161 “Resolution on the Land Question,” p. 7.Google Scholar

162 Ibid. p. 1.

163 Ibid. p. 2.

164 Ibid. p. 4. Anyone interested in the recent attempts to portray imperial China as a “gentry society,” will benefit from a critical study of these and other Communist formulations about the prominence of the “gentry” in traditional China.

165 See Wittfogel, 1957, pp. 408et seq.Google Scholar

166 Instead of “egalitarian classless communist society,” the official edition has “classless primitive communes” (Mao, , SW, III, p. 73Google Scholar). We reproduce Mao's wording as given in the earliest version at hand. Where the text in the official edition differs from Mao's Selected Works we give the new wording in a footnote. Where the texts are identical, we accept the official translation unless we disagree with its meaning. When this is the case, we indicate the difference in a footnote.

167 “4,000 years” (Mao, , SW, III, p. 73).Google Scholar

168 “primitive communes” (ibid.).

169 Tse-tung, Mao, Hsüan-chi (Ta-chung ed.), p. 156.Google Scholar

170 Ibid. p. 157.

171 Ibid. p. 158. In the official edition Mao raised the rates to “40, 50, 60, 70, or even 80 per cent, or more of the crops” (Mao, , SW, III, p. 74).Google Scholar

172 “previous to the Ch'in dynasty” (ibid. p. 75).

173 Chu-hou. The official English edition has “prince” (Mao, , SW, III, p. 75), which is closer to the Chinese meaning than the translation “feudal lord” given in most of the traditional sinological writings.Google Scholar

174 Tse-tung, Mao, Hsüan-chi (Ta-chung ed.), p. 158.Google Scholar The notion that in Chou times the chu-hou had absolute power within their territories harmonises with Maspero's statement that the socio-political order of these territories was not feudal. This factual statement contradicts Mao's interpretative claim concerning the feudal character of Chou society.

175 Official translation: “the mainstay” (Mao, , SW, III, p. 75).Google Scholar

176 Tse-tung, Mao, Hsüan-chi (Ta-chung ed.), p. 158.Google Scholar

177 Mao, , SW, III, p. 80.Google Scholar

178 “the foundation of the self-sufficing” (ibid. p. 80).

179 In the official edition the word “feudal” is omitted (ibid.).

180 Tse-tung, Mao, Hsüan-chi (Ta-chung ed.), p. 165; italics added.Google Scholar

181 Ibid. p. 159; cf. Mao, , SW, III, p. 76.Google Scholar

182 Mao, , SW III, p. 74.Google Scholar The official translation has “she remained sluggish.”

183 Ibid. p. 77.

184 Tse-tung, Mao, Hsüan-chi (Ta-chung ed.), p. 161.Google Scholar

185 Mao, , SW, III, p. 77; italics added.Google Scholar