May 4th, 1919
Political disunity and Civil War
Violence
Freedom
Major Periods of Disunity
Warring States (481-221 B.C.E.)
6 Dynasties Period (220-589 C.E.)
5 Dynasties Period (907-960)
“Republic of China” (1916-1949)
Political programs differ
Desire to "save China"
Anti-imperialism
Anti-warlordism
Borrowing from Europe and the U.S.
Total rejection of the past
*Sedan chair
In Family, what does the sedan chair represent to Chueh-hui?
*Footbinding: Why was footbinding a target of the New Culture Movement?
Elite households
PerpetuationWhy is it implied that footbinding persisted in Family (pp. 148-9)?
Old view among historians
Male domination
New view
Marriageability
Female enforcement
Traditional Confucians
Zhang Daye (1854-?) World of a Tiny Insect, 1894
Qing Dynasty Reformers
Kang Youwei (1858-1927)
Liang Qichao (1873-1929)
New Culture Intellectuals
Chen Duxiu (1879-1942)
Yang Changji (1871-1920)
From New Culture youth to revolutionaries
Pa Chin (Ba Jin, 1904-2005), anarchism
Family, published in 1931
Mao Zedong (1893-1976), communism
Periodicals
*New Youth (1915)
Against Confucianism and conservativism
6 principles
Independent, progressive, aggressive, cosmopolitan, practical, and scientific
Advocated
Pragmatism, scientific thinking and democracy
Language reform
Classical to “plain language”
German concessions in Shandong, 1898
Japanese occupation of Shandong, 1915
Chinese alliance with Allies, 1917
Japan's secret agreements with British & French
Shandong
Premier/Warlord Duan Qirui, 1918
Japan receives concessions in Shandong
Chinese delegation unaware of secret agreements
Against treaty and warlord government
Broader issues
Anti-Warlordism
Japanese imperialism
Boycott
Examples:
Chinese Communist Party founded
Family, published 1931
Surrounding walls
Houses for families of each adult male
Servants’ quarters
Covered walkways
Pavilions