Hu Feng: A Marxist Intellectual in a Communist State, 1930–1955

Research output: Book/ReportBook or reportpeer-review

Abstract

In this book, Ruth Y. Y. Hung provides a study of Hu Feng (1902–1985) as a critic, writer, and editor within the context of the People's Republic of China's political ascendancy. A member of the Japanese Communist Party and the Chinese Communist Party, Hu rose to fame in the 1940s and became a representative persecuted intellectual soon after 1949. "The Hu Feng Case" of 1955—more than a decade before the Cultural Revolution—was a significant, large-scale campaign of intellectual persecution. Hung examines Hu's work as a literary critic in this context, and examines the intricate historical and sociopolitical forces against which intellectuals in his milieu in twentieth-century China adopted Marxism as a measure of their critical position. She demonstrates how this first generation of modern Chinese literary critics practiced criticism, examining the skills and arguments they used to negotiate their institutional and ideological relations with state-party power. This exceptional case of intellectual engagement offers broader insight on critical literature's humanistic aims and methods in the context of intellectual globalization and changing political climates.
Original languageEnglish
PublisherSUNY Press
Number of pages285
ISBN (Print)1438479530, 9781438479538, 9781438479545
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2020

Publication series

NameSUNY series in Global Modernity

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Hu Feng: A Marxist Intellectual in a Communist State, 1930–1955'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this