
Wild Grass: China's Revolution from Below
A compelling history of Chinese resistance to state oppression, told through the stories of three remarkable individuals In Wild Grass, Pulitzer Prize-winning Ian Johnson describes a China caught between the desire for change percolating up from below and the ossified political structure above. He recounts the stories of three ordinary people who find themselves finding oppression and government corruption, risking imprisonment and even death. A young architecture student, a bereaved daughter, and a peasant legal clerk are the unlikely heroes of these stories, private citizens cast by unexpected circumstances into surprising roles.
Ian Johnson is a Pulitzer Prize-winner writer who has spent most of his adult life in China, working as a correspondent for The New York Times, The New York Review of Books, and The Wall Street Journal. He is the author of three other books that also focus on the intersection of politics, faith, and civil society, including The Souls of China- The Return of Religion After Mao, and Wild Grass- Three Stories of Change in Modern China. He is the founder of an archive of underground Chinese history, www.minjiandanganguan.com.
Author: Ian Johnson
Format: Paperback, 352 pages, 130mm x 198mm, 256 g
Published: 2021, Penguin Books Ltd, United Kingdom
Genre: Regional History
A compelling history of Chinese resistance to state oppression, told through the stories of three remarkable individuals In Wild Grass, Pulitzer Prize-winning Ian Johnson describes a China caught between the desire for change percolating up from below and the ossified political structure above. He recounts the stories of three ordinary people who find themselves finding oppression and government corruption, risking imprisonment and even death. A young architecture student, a bereaved daughter, and a peasant legal clerk are the unlikely heroes of these stories, private citizens cast by unexpected circumstances into surprising roles.
Ian Johnson is a Pulitzer Prize-winner writer who has spent most of his adult life in China, working as a correspondent for The New York Times, The New York Review of Books, and The Wall Street Journal. He is the author of three other books that also focus on the intersection of politics, faith, and civil society, including The Souls of China- The Return of Religion After Mao, and Wild Grass- Three Stories of Change in Modern China. He is the founder of an archive of underground Chinese history, www.minjiandanganguan.com.
