China and the Cholera Pandemic China and the Cholera Pandemic

China and the Cholera Pandemic

Restructuring Society under Mao

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Descripción editorial

Winner, 2022 Outstanding Academic Title, CHOICE Awards

Mao Zedong’s Great Leap Forward campaign organized millions of Chinese peasants into communes in a misguided attempt to rapidly collectivize agriculture with disastrous effects. Catastrophic famine lingered as the global cholera pandemic of the early 1960s spread rampantly through the infected waters of southeastern coastal China. Confronted with a political crisis and the seventh global cholera pandemic in recorded history, the communist government committed to social restructuring in order to affirm its legitimacy and prevent transmission of the disease. Focusing on the Wenzhou Prefecture in Zhejiang Province, the area most seriously stricken by cholera at the time, Xiaoping Fang demonstrates how China’s pandemic was far more than a health incident; it became a significant social and political influence during a dramatic transition for the People’s Republic.

China and the Cholera Pandemic reveals how disease control and prevention, executed through the government’s large-scale, clandestine anticholera campaign, were integral components of its restructuring initiatives, aimed at restoring social order. The subsequent rise of an emergency disciplinary health state furthered these aims through quarantine and isolation, which profoundly impacted the social epidemiology of the region, dividing Chinese society and reinforcing hierarchies according to place, gender, and socioeconomic status.

GÉNERO
Ciencia y naturaleza
PUBLICADO
2021
13 de abril
IDIOMA
EN
Inglés
EXTENSIÓN
312
Páginas
EDITORIAL
University of Pittsburgh Press
VENTAS
University of Pittsburgh Press
TAMAÑO
11.6
MB