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Title: Ba Jin (1904–2005)
Date: 2011
Source: *The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest*, Edited by Immanuel Ness. DOI: 10.1002/9781405198073.wbierp1759
Authors: Daniel Cairns
Topics: China, Biography, Chinese anarchism, Anarchist biography
Published: 2020-05-10 06:44:43Z

The writer Ba Jin was born Li Yaotang, also

named Feigan, to a wealthy family in Sichuan.

Nominated for the Nobel Prize in literature

twice, he is also considered to be one of

the most influential Chinese writers of the

twentieth century. His pen name derives

from the Chinese transliterations of Bakunin

and Kropotkin, both Russian anarchists he

admired. At the age of 15 he declared himself

an anarchist, shortly thereafter joining the

Equality Society, a Chengdu-based revolutionary anarchist group. Through the organ

of this group, Ba Jin published his first works,

essays on Tolstoy and the Industrial Workers

of the World (IWW). In the 1920s Ba Jin

became an accomplished anarchist propagandist and translator, responsible for the first

Chinese-language editions of many anarchist

texts, although his literary accomplishments

in fiction are better known. Yet, much of

his fiction also addresses social and cultural

issues. For example, his renowned novel *The Family* deals with the issue of oppression

in the traditional Chinese family structure.

Throughout his career, save for the Japanese

invasion of China, he was a distinguished

anti-militarist, if not necessarily a pacifist.

As an anti-statist, he was openly critical of

the Guomindang (Nationalist Party) GMD

and the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).

However, he was rehabilitated in the People’s

Republic of China later in his life, involving

editing his complete works to suit the CCP.

During the Cultural Revolution, Red Guards

targeted him for “reeducation;” he was publicly thrashed and his library burned. He

was arrested and sent to labor camps until

1976. Reemerging from the ordeal, he distinguished himself as a social commentator

until his death.

References and Suggested Readings

<biblio>

Ba Jin. (1992) Family. Trans. S. Shapiro. Boston:

Cheng, & Tsui.

Lang, O. (1967) Pa Chin and His Writings. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Lau, J., & Goldblatt, H. (Eds.) (1995) The Columbia

Anthology of Modern Chinese Literature. New

York: Columbia University Press.

Mao, N. (1978) Pa Kin. Boston: Twayne.

Zhelokhovtsev, A. (1984) Ba Jin: Writer and

Patriot. Far Eastern Affairs 1: 120–32.

</biblio>

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