Chuang is a collective of communists who consider the ‘China question’ to be of central relevance to the contradictions of the world’s economic system and the potentials for its overcoming. Their goal is to formulate a body of clear-headed theory capable of understanding contemporary China and its potential trajectories. In this first issue, they outline their basic conceptual framework and illustrate the current state of class conflict in China. The issue also includes translated reports and interviews with the proletarians engaged in these struggles, pairing their theory with primary sources drawn from class dynamics that might otherwise remain abstract.
Though taking the present moment as their starting point, this first issue is also in a way performing burial rites for the dead generations who have populated the collapse of the communist horizon in East Asia. The issue therefore begins with a long-form article on the socialist era, ‘Sorghum and Steel: The Socialist Developmental Regime and the Forging of China’, the first in a three-part series aiming to narrate a new economic history of China (the next two parts will be included in subsequent issues), before moving on to a pair of analytic articles on contemporary urban and rural struggles, as well as original translations and interviews with individuals engaged in them.
This is a small-run first edition printing of Chuang‘s first issue, which was supported by SIC. All proceeds from this edition in excess of printing costs will be used to print Issue 2 in greater volume. More material from their project can be found on their blog, where a sample article from this first issue is available.
Table of Contents:
- Editorial: A Thousand Li
- Sorghum and Steel: The Socialist Developmental Regime and the Forging of China
- Gleaning the Welfare Fields: Rural Struggles in China since 1959
- Revisiting the Wukan Uprising of 2011: An Interview with Zhuang Liehong
- No Way Forward, No Way Back: China in the Era of Riots
- ‘The Future is Hidden within these Realities’: Selected Translations from Factory Stories