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The Development and Death of Chinese Academic Sociology: A Chapter in the Sociology of Sociology

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2008

Ambrose Yeo-Chi King
Affiliation:
The Chinese University of Hong Kong

Extract

Although 1949 is not a magical year in Chinese history in the sense of marking a total break with the centuries-old traditions and culture, it is appropriate to say that 1949 is the year which symbolizes the end of Chinese sociology. In this paper we attempt to give a socio-historical account of the genesis, development, struggle and then death of sociology in China, covering a period of more than half a century. The first part of the paper will deal with the institutionalization of sociology as a transplanted Western flower in Chinese soil; the second part describes and analyses how Chinese sociology struggled for its legitimacy for survival under Chinese Communism and how the battle was lost.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1978

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References

Dr Ambrose King wishes to thank Miss Barbara E. Ward for her valuable comments on an earlier version of this paper. His gratitude is also especially due to the Leverhulme Foundation for supporting his visit to Great Britain and to Clare Hall, Cambridge, for providing him with a culturally rich and most stimulating environment during his stay.

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23 Hsiao-tung, Fei, ‘How Sociology Should be Reconstructed’.Google Scholar

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29 Ibid.

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31 Ibid.

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37 Ibid.

38 Ibid.

39 Ibid.

40 See Fisher, G. (ed.), Science and Ideology in Soviet Society (New York: Atherton, 1967);Google ScholarSimiranko, Alex (ed.), Soviet Sociology (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1967).Google Scholar

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50 Guillain, Robert remarks in Le Monde, ‘It is no over-simplification of the massive series of reforms [of the ‘Cultural Revolution’]…to say that their key objective—defined by Chairman Mao himself—is the elimination of the academic intellectual’.Google Scholar Quoted in Gouldner, , For Sociology, p. 450.Google Scholar

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52 Yeo-chi King, Ambrose and Tse-sang, Wang, ‘Social Investigations in Communist China: The Emergence of Maoist Sociology’, Journal of Social and Political Affairs, Vol. 1, No. 3 (07 1976).Google Scholar