Please wait a minute...
Frontiers of History in China

ISSN 1673-3401

ISSN 1673-3525(Online)

CN 11-5740/K

Postal Subscription Code 80-980

Front. Hist. China    2014, Vol. 9 Issue (1) : 56-82    https://doi.org/10.3868/s020-003-014-0003-3
research-article
Chicken-Footed Gods or Village Protectors: Conscription, Community, and Conflict in Rural Sichuan, 1937–1945
Kevin Landdeck()
Sarah Lawrence College, Bronxville, NY 10708, USA
 Download: PDF(323 KB)  
 Export: BibTeX | EndNote | Reference Manager | ProCite | RefWorks
Abstract

Mobilizing men to serve in the army was one of the fundamental tasks of the Nationalist government during the Anti-Japanese War (1937–45). Using ground-level conscription cases from counties around Chongqing, this paper examines wartime rural administration. In interior areas, the draft rested on rural administrators, the recently revived baojia system. The baojia heads were in a difficult position: the state demanded full quotas of draftees, while residents tried to leverage bureaucratic discipline by filing accusations against them with higher ups. Their divided loyalties produced both predation and protection. Alongside the familiar stories of predatory extortion and press-gang conscription, baojia leaders also acted in ways that were protective of their neighbours and communities. The patterns of draft-related cases in rural Sichuan revise our picture of baojia leaders as unchecked bullies and thus throw new light on both the KMT’s war effort and its state-making.

Keywords Anti-Japanese War (1937–45)      conscription      KMT      Sichuan      baojia      rural society      state-making     
Issue Date: 16 May 2014
 Cite this article:   
Kevin Landdeck. Chicken-Footed Gods or Village Protectors: Conscription, Community, and Conflict in Rural Sichuan, 1937–1945[J]. Front. Hist. China, 2014, 9(1): 56-82.
 URL:  
https://academic.hep.com.cn/fhc/EN/10.3868/s020-003-014-0003-3
https://academic.hep.com.cn/fhc/EN/Y2014/V9/I1/56
Viewed
Full text


Abstract

Cited

  Shared   
  Discussed