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From academic nitpicking to a “New Culture Movement”: how newspapers turned academic debates into the center of “May Fourth”

From academic nitpicking to a “New Culture Movement”: how newspapers turned academic debates into the center of “May Fourth”
From academic nitpicking to a “New Culture Movement”: how newspapers turned academic debates into the center of “May Fourth”
In early 1919, people like Hu Shi and Chen Duxiu were regarded as members of an ivory-tower “academic faction” (xuepai), embroiled in a debate with an opposing “faction.” After the May Fourth demonstrations, they were praised as the stars of a “New Culture Movement.” However, it was not obvious how the circle around Hu Shi and Chen Duxiu was associated with the May Fourth demonstrations. This link hinged on the way in which newspapers like Shenbao reported about the academic debates and the political events of May Fourth. After compartmentalizing the debating academics into fixed xuepai, Shenbao ascribed warlord-political allegiances to them. These made the Hu-Chen circle look like government victims and their “factional” rivals like the warlords’ allies. When the atmosphere became hostile to the government during May Fourth, Hu Shi’s “faction” became associated with the equally victimized May Fourth demonstrators. Their ideas were regarded as (now popular) expressions of anti-government sentiment, and soon this was labeled the core of the “New Culture Movement.” The idea and rhetoric of China’s “New Culture Movement” in this way emerged out of the fortuitous concatenation of academic debates, newspaper stories, and political events.
1673-3401
534–557
Forster, Elisabeth
5b83dcba-7458-48bc-bd25-e2833d542bb4
Forster, Elisabeth
5b83dcba-7458-48bc-bd25-e2833d542bb4

Forster, Elisabeth (2014) From academic nitpicking to a “New Culture Movement”: how newspapers turned academic debates into the center of “May Fourth”. Frontiers of History in China, 9 (4), 534–557. (doi:10.3868/s020-003-014-0037-2).

Record type: Article

Abstract

In early 1919, people like Hu Shi and Chen Duxiu were regarded as members of an ivory-tower “academic faction” (xuepai), embroiled in a debate with an opposing “faction.” After the May Fourth demonstrations, they were praised as the stars of a “New Culture Movement.” However, it was not obvious how the circle around Hu Shi and Chen Duxiu was associated with the May Fourth demonstrations. This link hinged on the way in which newspapers like Shenbao reported about the academic debates and the political events of May Fourth. After compartmentalizing the debating academics into fixed xuepai, Shenbao ascribed warlord-political allegiances to them. These made the Hu-Chen circle look like government victims and their “factional” rivals like the warlords’ allies. When the atmosphere became hostile to the government during May Fourth, Hu Shi’s “faction” became associated with the equally victimized May Fourth demonstrators. Their ideas were regarded as (now popular) expressions of anti-government sentiment, and soon this was labeled the core of the “New Culture Movement.” The idea and rhetoric of China’s “New Culture Movement” in this way emerged out of the fortuitous concatenation of academic debates, newspaper stories, and political events.

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Forster Elisabeth. From Academic Nitpicking to a New Culture Movement (open acess version) - Accepted Manuscript
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e-pub ahead of print date: 20 December 2014
Published date: December 2014

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 423727
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/423727
ISSN: 1673-3401
PURE UUID: 52e687dd-6c23-4866-ab94-c3aa4a487088

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Date deposited: 28 Sep 2018 16:30
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 21:54

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