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Title: Li Shizeng (1881–1973)
Date: 2011
Source: *The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest*, Edited by Immanuel Ness. DOI: 10.1002/9781405198073.wbierp1790
Authors: Daniel Cairns
Topics: biography, China, anarchist biography, Chinese Anarchism
Published: 2020-05-10 06:37:23Z

Li Shizeng was a Chinese anarchist, educator,

and Guomindang (Kuomintang) member.

He spent the most notable years of his life

publishing anarchist materials in France and

initiating the Work-Study Movement. Born

into a wealthy and respected family, he was

son to an advisor to the Tongzhi emperor;

prestigious careers beckoned. En route to

study biology at the Pasteur Institute in Paris

in 1902, Li met Wu Zhihui, henceforth his

lifelong comrade. In 1906 they founded the

first Chinese anarchist organization, the New

World Society. Soon afterwards this group

began publication of *Xin Shiji* (*New Era*),

which ran for three years, an exceptional

span for a Chinese periodical of the time.

The journal, to which Li contributed his gifts

as a writer, translator, and editor, focused

on translating anarchist texts and criticizing Manchu rule. This led the editorship to

become involved with other anti-Manchu

groups such as the Revolutionary Alliance

and Guomindang. Despite other anarchists’

criticism, Li suspended his suspicions of

political parties when working with the

Guomindang.

The most notable product of anarchist–Guomindang cooperation, the National

Labor University, was a project with a distinctly working-class, anti-authoritarian,

even subversive bent. Other innovative syntheses of anarchism and education in which Li

participated included the Frugal Study Society of 1912, the Diligent Work-Frugal Study

Society of 1915, and the Sino-French Educational Association of 1916. These formed part

of the Work-Study Movement, a scheme to

bring gifted Chinese students to France where

they would study science and humanism,

support themselves through hard work and

anarchist conviviality, and ultimately become

the next generation of revolutionary leaders.

Indeed, when hard times hit the students in

Paris – as in 1921, when the formal organizations could not support them all – students

spontaneously banded together in “mutual

aid groups” inspired by Li’s teachings.

For Li, anarchism was a moral philosophy

linked to western scientific and humanistic

principles. Trained as a biologist, he showed

great interest in Darwin and the anarchist

Kropotkin, whose *Mutual Aid* offered a corollary and supplement to Darwinism. It was

Jacques Reclus, grand-nephew of anarchist

scientist Elisée Reclus, who introduced Li

to anarchism. Li’s anarchist revolutionary

writings, therefore, emphasized modern

ideas against traditional Chinese beliefs.

Furthermore, he despised drawing parallels

between Daoism and anarchism. Anarchism

for him was scientific, Daoism obscurantist;

they were polar opposites. He opposed the

Confucian tradition of the patriarchal family

as sexist, authoritarian, and unhealthy.

Li’s contributions to anarchist literature

were inspiring to a generation of Chinese radicals. As examples, the novelist Ba Jin decided

to dedicate his life to the anarchist movement

after reading Kropotkin’s “An Appeal to the

Young,” which Li translated into Chinese,

and Shifu, China’s revolutionary paragon,

converted to anarchism after reading *New Era* while in prison.

In the 1920s, Li became a member of

the Central Supervisory Committee of

the Guomindang, seemingly abandoning

anti-parliamentarism. In his later years, he

retired to Taiwan and Uruguay.

References and Suggested Readings

<biblio>

Bailey, P. (1988) The Chinese Work-Study Movement in France. China Quarterly 115: 441–61.

Chan, M. K., & Dirlik, A. (1992) Schools into

Fields and Factories: Anarchists, the Guomindang, and the National Labor University in

Shanghai, 1927–1932. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

Dirlik, A. (1991) Anarchism in the Chinese Revolution. Berkeley: University of California Press.

Levine, M. (1993) The Found Generation. Seattle:

University of Washington Press.

Li S., & Chu M. (1907) Geming [Revolution]. Paris:

Xin shiji congshu.

Zarrow, P. (1990) Anarchism and Chinese Political

Culture. New York: Columbia University Press.

</biblio>

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