China's Red Army Marches

China's Red Army Marches (1934), by Agnes Smedley. Also published in the USSR as Red Flood Over China.

This book gives a detailed account of the Chinese Soviet Republic in Jiangxi from 1928 to 1931, ending with the proclamation of the Soviet Republic of China in 1931. It has been described as pioneering "a new form of socially conscious art that considerably influenced leftist reportage in the 1930s", because "she spoke of individuals experiences, but she meant her readers to view the people about whom she wrote as representatives of a larger group who chose the mass actions linked to China's emerging Communist movement as an alternative to their despair.

The book has many details including an account of the Anti-Bolshevik League. Neither Smedley nor any other Western reporter visited Chinese Soviet, but she had first-hand accounts from Chinese Communist fighters whom she covertly sheltered in Shanghai. Her main sources were two Red Army commanders, Zhou Jianping and Chen Geng. It is strongly partisan for the Chinese Communists and hostile to the Guomintang (Kuomintang).

The book does not deal with events past 1931, nor does it anticipate the destruction of the Jiangxi Soviet and the subsequent Long March. It does however have detailed accounts of the words and actions of Zhu De (Chu Teh), Peng Dehuai (Peng Teh-hewi) and Mao Zedong, whose name is inaccurately given as 'Mau Tse-tung'. It includes a full speech by Mao and some shorter remarks, perhaps the first time his words had appeared in English.

It also has some detailed accounts of early CCP policies, including land-reform policies that were more extreme than those followed after the Long March. And many accounts of battles, including the capture and subsequent loss of Changsha. And an emphasis on the importance given to educating the poor and giving rights to women.

This book and also Chinese Destinies were covertly circulated in Guomintang-ruled China, both in English and in Chinese translations. It was one of only three foreign publications to be formally banned by the Guomintang government. She had long been identified by them as a major foe, and they even made the bizarre claim that she had brought cases of whisky to the Jiangxi Soviet base and had stood nude before a mass rally, singing the Internationale. (Claims of sexual laxity in Chinese Communist areas were common at the time. Edgar Snow in Red Star Over China mentions them as something he had heard but had correctly disbelieved.)