Suppression of workers and CCP
Nanchang Uprising, August 1, 1927
Changsha "Autumn Harvest Uprising," Sept. 7, 1927
Canton Uprising, Dec. 11, 1927
Changsha uprising, Sept. 1927
Jinggang Mountains, Oct. 1927
Zhu De
Ruijin
Why was the GMD government unable to prevent a nascent communist insurgency in these base areas?
Secure territorial base
Mass support of peasantry
Self-sufficiency
Guerrilla warfare
“The enemy advances, we retreat; the enemy camps, we harass; the enemy tires, we attack; the enemy retreats, we pursue.” (Spence, Search for Modern China, p. 369)
How does Averill's article "Party, Society, and Local Elite in the Jiangxi Communist Movement" challenge the Mao-centered view of the origins of the communist activism in the rural highlands of Jiangxi Province?
Organize and motivate
Fight enemies
Purge allies
Reformist phase, 1929-30
Wins cooperation of elite
Tax remission
Interest reduction
Radical phase, mid-1930
"Futian Incident," Dec. 1930 (Averill, "Party, Society, and Local Elite," pp. 296-98)
Destroys power of local elite
Purge of CCP cadres
Authoritarianism (Venerable Master Kao)
Land redistribution
Marriage
Status of women
Annual campaigns, 1930-1934
German advisers
Economic and military blockade
5th Campaign, 1934
100,000 Red Army soldiers
700,000 GMD
Depart Jiangxi, Oct. 16, 1934
85,000 soldiers
15,000 govt. officials
Zunyi, Guizhou, January 1935
Mao returned to power
*Yan'an, Shaanxi, Oct. 20, 1935
8,000 survivors
6,000 miles