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One Quarter of Humanity: Malthusian Mythology and Chinese Realities, 1700-2000
 
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One Quarter of Humanity: Malthusian Mythology and Chinese Realities, 1700-2000 [Paperback]

James Z. Lee (Author), Feng Wang (Author)
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Book Description

0674007093 978-0674007093 December 21, 2001

This book presents evidence about historical and contemporary Chinese population behavior that overturns much of the received wisdom about the differences between China and the West first voiced by Malthus. Malthus described a China in which early and universal marriage ensured high fertility and therefore high mortality. He contrasted this with Western Europe, where marriage occurred late and was far from universal, resulting in lower fertility and higher demographic responsiveness to economic circumstances. The result in China was thought to be mass misery as part of the population teetered on the brink of a Malthusian precipice, whereas in the West conditions were less severe.

In reality, James Lee and Wang Feng argue, there has been effective regulation of population growth in China through a variety of practices that depressed marital fertility to levels far below European standards, and through the widespread practices of infanticide and abortion. Moreover, in China, population behavior has long been primarily a consequence of collective intervention. This collective culture underlies four distinctive features of the Chinese demographic pattern--high rates of female infanticide, low rates of male marriage, low rates of marital fertility, and high rates of adoption--that Lee and Wang trace from 1700 to today. These and other distinctive features of the Chinese demographic and social system, they argue, led to a different demographic transition in China from the one that took place in the West.


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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

James Z. Lee is Dean of the School of Humanities and Social Science at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.  When he wrote this book he was Associate Professor of Chinese History at the California Institute of Technology.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

http://www.hup.harvard.edu/pdf/LEEONE_excerpt.pdf --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 268 pages
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press (December 21, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0674007093
  • ISBN-13: 978-0674007093
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.2 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.1 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #172,374 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

James Z. Lee
Brief Biographical Sketch


James Z. Lee (1952 -) is Dean of the School of Humanities and Social Sciences at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Faculty Associate at the Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research at the University of Michigan, and Jiangxi Visiting Professor at Shanghai Jiaotong University. A practitioner of social scientific history, the application of quantitative social science methods on historical data, he and his colleagues in the Lee-Campbell Research Group use historical and contemporary archival sources as well as other sources to create large individual level panel data sets extending from late imperial to contemporary China. Their research emphasizes how despite recent profound political, social, and economic changes, many distinctive institutions and patterns of demographic behavior, stratification, and social mobility persist from China's imperial past.

Professor Lee's published work includes six authored or co-authored books, six co-edited books or textbooks, and sixty articles focused largely on the demography, ethnicity, fiscal and frontier history of late imperial China, as well as on the social organization, and social mobility of late imperial and contemporary China. He has recently extended his area of research from historical China to the comparative demography and sociology of East Asian and West European populations in the past and Chinese higher education and social stratification in the present. A John Simon Guggenheim Fellow (2004), he is also a recipient of the Social Science History Association's Allan Sharlin Award for Best Book in Social Science History (2000), and two American Sociological Association section best book awards, the Otis Dudley Duncan Award for Distinguished Scholarship in Social Demography from the Population Section (2000) and the Outstanding Book on Asia published in 2003 and 2004 from the Asia and Asian America Section (2005). His book, La population chinoise. Mythes et réalités (Presses de l'Université de Montréal, 2006) was a finalist for the 2007 Prix Jean-Charles-Falardeau for best French-language book in the Social Sciences from The Canadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences.

Professor Lee's latest books are Prudence and Pressure: Reproduction and Human Agency in Europe and Asia, 1700-1900, published by MIT Press in 2010 and 中国西南社会经济史 (Social and economic history of southwest China, 1250-1850), published by Beijing: 人民出版社 in 2011.

 

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Very Interesting; 4.5 Stars, December 31, 2010
By 
R. Albin (Ann Arbor, Michigan United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: One Quarter of Humanity: Malthusian Mythology and Chinese Realities, 1700-2000 (Paperback)
This short and well written book is a summary of Chinese historical demography from around 1700 to 2000. The authors are particularly concerned with rebutting a naive Malthusian view of Chinese society as governed by unlimited fertility checked only by subsistence crises. As the authors point out also, Malthus' actual analysis was more sophisticated than this simplified version but the naive view has been endorsed by quite a few subsequent scholars. Lee and Wang argue for complex and distinctive Chinese regulation of demographic variables. Embedded within a deeply patriarchal and patrilineal culture, Lee and Wang suggest that poor and elite Chinese families used a combination of female infanticide (and its corollary, favoring male older children), practices that promoted relatively low marital fertility, and production of a relatively high rate of non-reproducing males. These complex and interacting practices, combined with other features such as fictive kinship that allowed families to overcome lack of offspring via adoptions, allowed Chinese families to tailor reproduction to economic circumstances. They assign a relatively small role for famine per se in population control, and emphasis that Chinese population growth has been driven by phenomena observed also in the Western world, including an 18th century population boom perhaps secondary to increased agricultural productivity and expanded farmlands, the application of public health measures in the late 19th and 20th centuries, and the more recent application of modern medical care.

Lee and Wang also suggest that China underwent a distinctive path to demographic transition, the fall in fertility associated with modernization. In Western societies, they emphasize increasing emphasis of personal choice and voluntary drop in fertility. In China, the remarkably rapid demographic transition has been driven by communal and coercive restraints generated by the state and the Party. They argue as well that the transition, however, was facilitated by the Chinese tradition of fertility restraint via communal mechanisms. Some of the detailed discussion of these issues is particularly interesting, especially the description of the baby boom that followed collectization. They also have a very interesting discussion of how these communal restraints on fertility are an example, perhaps the best example, of a real difference in Chinese and Western society.

This book has some unavoidable limitations of which readers should be aware. It was published initially about 10 years ago and parts are a bit dated. Included, for example, is an old prediction that China's population would peak at 1.6 billion at mid-century. A more recent prediction (US Census International Database) is that 2050 will see a Chinese population of about 1.3 billion and be on the decline. Lee and Wang mention that the most prosperous regions of late 18th century China had comparable living standards to prosperous regions of Western Europe. I believe that this has been a controversial point in the scholarly literature related to the origins of the Industrial Revolution and that some economic historians think this incorrect. It also appears that Chinese prosperity was accomplished by labor intensification and agricultural involution, a somewhat different path than 18th century Britain or Holland. Probably because of data limitations, there is relatively little discussion of diachronic differences in pre-modern China. It may be that the 18th century was somewhat different from the 19th century, certainly the latter was characterized by slower Chinese population growth and a number of enormous catastrophes, including the Tai Ping rebellion and the late century famines chronicled by Mike Davis in his Late Victorian Holocausts. While the naive Malthusian view is clearly wrong, it may be that 18th century population growth and environmental degradation produced some semi-Malthusian effects that reduced the safety margin for many regions of China.
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