Mark Baker, "Pivot of China: Spatial Politics and Inequality in Modern Zhengzhou" (Harvard Asia Center, 2024)
Jul 24, 2024
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Historian Mark Baker discusses spatial politics and inequality in modern China, focusing on Zhengzhou's development disparities. Topics cover urban growth, railroad impact, Great Leap Forward inequality, and future research plans on WWII in China.
Spatial inequalities in modern China are shaped by resource concentration in urban areas.
Urban planning in Zhengzhou exemplifies the shift towards urban-centric strategies over rural uplift.
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Historical Context of Zhengzhou
The podcast delves into the historical background of Zhengzhou, highlighting Dr. Mark Baker's exploration of rural-urban inequalities in modern China. Mark recounts his research journey from Qing and Republican periods to the Great Leap Forward, focusing on the spatial politics and dynamics of inequality between cities like Zhengzhou and Kaifeng. Through his work, he uncovers the complexities of urban development and governmental interventions shaping China's history.
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Spatial Politics and Inequality
The podcast explores the impact of contradictory forces during critical periods like the Great Leap Forward and Cultural Revolution on Zhengzhou's spatial politics and inequalities. The discussion highlights the struggle between state motives to equalize and connect spaces, and the competing drive to disconnect and prioritize specific areas. This paradoxical dynamic shaped the city's development trajectory, reflecting broader challenges in balancing urbanization, economic policies, and social equality in modern China.
China’s modern history has been marked by deep spatial inequalities between regions, between cities, and between rural and urban areas. Contemporary observers and historians alike have attributed these inequalities to distinct stages of China's political economy: the dualistic economy of semicolonialism, rural-urban divisions in the socialist period, and capital concentration in the reform era. In Pivot of China: Spatial Politics and Inequality in Modern Zhengzhou (Harvard Asia Center, 2024), Mark Baker shows how different states across twentieth-century China shaped these inequalities in similar ways, concentrating resources in urban and core areas at the expense of rural and regional peripheries.
Pivot of China examines this dynamic through the city of Zhengzhou, one of the most dramatic success stories of China’s urbanization: a railroad boomtown of the early twentieth century, a key industrial center and provincial capital of Henan Province in the 1950s, and by the 2020s a “National Central City” of almost ten million people. However, due to the spatial politics of resource concentration, Zhengzhou’s twentieth-century growth as a regional city did not kickstart a wider economic takeoff in its hinterland. Instead, unequal spatial politics generated layers of inequality that China is still grappling with in the twenty-first century.
Huiying Chen is an Assistant Professor in History at Purdue University. She is interested in the circulation of people, goods, and ideas and how societies in history and today cope with the challenges wrought by increased travel in aspects of culture, politics, commerce, law, science, and technology.