Interview with Song Jiying
-
Download
- Rights
- Files (1)
-
MP4
- Please be patient with media downloads. They are often large files.
-
Documents
- Document
-
216 - SONG Jiying_blog-en.docx
- Document
-
216-SONG Jiying-2013_blog-cn.docx
- Document
-
247-SONG Jiying-2013_blog-cn.docx
- Document
-
247-SONG Jiying-2013_blog-en.docx
-
Share
Embed CodePermalink
- Skip to Item Info
Loading the media player...
Item Info
- Title:
- Interview with Song Jiying
- Date:
- February 15, 2011
- Interviewer:
- Interviewee:
- Description:
-
Song Jiying (b. 1922) is a resident of Liangmeng Village, Zhuliang Town, Qingzhou City, Shandong Province. In this interview, Song recalls that many villagers starved to death and some villagers ate dead bodies. She says the central government did not distribute grains until after the Yanghe Incident happened.
宋机英(1922年生)是山东省青州市朱良镇良孟村村民。在这段口述中,宋老人描述了大饥荒时期到处饿死人,吃死人肉,直到阳河事件之后才从中央下发了粮食的经历。
Transcripts for this interview and more may be available under the ‘Documents’ link above. 采访抄录和相关内容,请点击查看上面的’Documents’链接。
- Location:
- Subject:
- Format:
- interviews
- Language:
- Chinese
- Digital Collection:
- The Memory Project
- Catalog Record:
- https://find.library.duke.edu/catalog/DUKE009127403
- Source Collection:
- The Memory Project Oral History collection | 民间记忆计划口述史, 2009-2016
- Rights:
- Limited Re-UseCC BY-NC-SA 4.0
- Rights Note:
- Rights in these materials are owned by their creators and are licensed for reuse under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 License (English: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0. Chinese: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/deed.zh). For reuses beyond the scope of that license or for other questions about rights, please see: https://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/research/citations-and-permissions.
- Identifier:
-
- RL10171mpg0075
- 6683181ee79d4e491a9ad7c741b4a69b
- 009127403
- memoryproject
- songjiying
- ark:/87924/r4v12435b
- 0b913ed8-aa0c-44cd-88eb-a87777819a07
- Permalink:
- https://idn.duke.edu/ark:/87924/r4v12435b
- Sponsor:
- Sponsor this Digital Collection
The preservation of the Duke University Libraries Digital Collections and the Duke Digital Repository programs are supported in part by the Lowell and Eileen Aptman Digital Preservation Fund