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Revolutionary Women and Women in the Revolution: The Chinese Communist Party and Women in the War of Resistance to Japan, 1937–1945*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 February 2009

Extract

On a late winter's day in 1989 a grey-haired, round woman of about 80 in a padded jacket and a black beanie moved across 1st May Square in the centre of Taiyuan, the capital of Shanxi province. She was presenting awards to the PLA's most recent young “model soldiers” – recruits who had just finished top of their class in basic training. This was Balu mama – the “Mother of the Eighth Route Army,” Bao Lianzi. Now the retired head of a clinic, 50 years earlier she had been part of a women's support group for soldiers during the War of Resistance to Japan, in her native Wuxiang. At that time, Wuxiang, together with Liaoxian and Licheng counties in South-east Shanxi, and Shexian in Northern Henan, was the core of the Taihang Base Area, itself the centre of the Shanxi-Hebei-Shandong-Henan Border Region and one of the major base areas behind Japanese lines. It supported the field headquarters of the Eighth Route Army under Peng Dehuai; the offices of the North China Bureau under Yang Shangkun; and Deng Xiaoping, eyes and ears for Mao Zedong on the front line.

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Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 2000

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References

1. Report of an interview detailing with part of her life and work may be found in Zhikuan, Li and Ruzhen, Song, “Balu mama” (“Mother of the Eighth Route Army”), in Zhonggong Wuxiang xianwei xuanchuanbu and Zhonggong Wuxiang xianwei dangshi bangongshi (ed.), Wuxiang fenghuo (The Flames of War in Wuxiang) (Licheng: Licheng CCP Committee, 1985), Vol. 1, p. 535.Google Scholar

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3. The Taihang Base Area, particularly in the form of the base area committee of the CCP, went through a number of different name changes during 1937–45. For the sake of convenience and clarity all will be referred to by the name that applied at the end of the war: the Taihang Base Area.

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67. Zhonggong Shanxisheng Licheng xianwei zuzhibu, Zhonggong Shanxisheng Licheng xianwei dangshi yanjiushi, Shanxisheng Licheng xian danganju, Organizational History of Licheng County, p. 56.Google Scholar

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74. Zhonggong Shanxisheng Zuoquan xianwei zuzhibu, Zhonggong Shanxisheng Zuoquan xianwei dangshi yanjiushi, Shanxisheng Zuoquan xian danganju (ed.), Zhongguo gongchandang Shanxisheng Zuoquan xian zuzhishi ziliao 1937.10–1987.10 (Organizational History of the CCP in Zuoquan County, Shanxi, 1937–1987) (Taiyuan: Shanxi renmin chubanshe, 1992), p. 89.Google Scholar

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82. Yongbo, Yu (ed.), Nie Rongzhen zhuan (Biography of Nie Rongzhen) (Beijing: Dangdai Zhongguo chubanshe, 1994), p. 264.Google Scholar

83. Zhonggong JinJiYu qudangwei, Liaoxian diaocha baogao (Report of an Investigation into Liaoxian), 05 1942, pp. 58.Google Scholar

84. Ibid. pp. 140–41.

85. Zhonggong JinJiYu qudangwei, “Guanyu jiaqiang qunzhong gongzuode jueding” (“Decision on strengthening mass work”), 15 02 1941, in Taihang geming genjudishi zongbian weihui (ed.), Qunzhong yundong (The Mass Movement), Taihang geming genjudi shiliao congshu No. 7 (Taiyuan: Shanxi renmin chubanshe, 1989), p. 162.Google Scholar

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88. Ibid. pp. 247–48; Fuwei, Taihang, “Funu gongzuo chubu yanjiu” (“Preliminary research on women's work”), 4 10 1945Google Scholar, in Taihang geming genjudishi zongbian weihui, The Mass Movement, p. 434.Google Scholar

89. Zhongguo gongchandang Zuoquan xianwei dangshi yanjiushi, A Brief History of the CCP in Zuoquan County, pp. 265–67.Google Scholar

90. Ibid. pp. 247–48.

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92. Zikang, Li “Taihang lao jiefangqu jiaoyu gongzuo huiyi” (“Remembering education work in the early-liberated parts of the Taihang Region”), in Taihang geming genjudishi zongbian weihui (ed.), Wenhua shiye (Cultural Affairs), Taihang geming genjudi shiliao congshu No. 8 (Taiyuan: Shanxi renmin chubanshe, 1989), p. 475.Google Scholar

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