Hostname: page-component-5c6d5d7d68-ckgrl Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-08-23T13:18:04.906Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Some Recent Studies of Revolutionary Movements in China in the Early Twentieth Century1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 December 2009

Extract

When revolution broke out in China in 1911 and rapidly led to the overthrow of the dynasty and the founding of a republic, opinion throughout the world was startled and deeply impressed. The European press expressed amazement that a quaint Oriental people such as the Chinese should take it into their heads to carry out an anti-monarchical revolution, and that hard-headed political realist Vladimir Ilich Lenin waxed positively lyrical about the Chinese revolution and its leader. ‘The East’, he wrote, ‘has committed itself to the Western path,…further hundreds and hundreds of millions of people will from now on join in the struggle for the ideals for which the West has striven’. In Sun Yat-sen, he saw ‘a revolutionary democrat, imbued with that nobility and heroism peculiar to a rising rather than a declining class’. Even when Sun had been supplanted as President by Yüan Shih-k'ai, Lenin still saw a ‘mighty democratic movement’ in progress throughout Asia, whereby hundreds of millions of people were ‘awakening into life, light, and freedom’. Succeeding generations of scholars and political observers, instructed by the spectacle of corruption, division, and military domination which unfolded itself in various guises throughout the era from 1911 to 1949, have gone almost completely to the opposite extreme. What happened in 1911 was not a revolution at all, or only in the most superficial sense; the monarchical system was indeed overthrown, but there was no real change in the locus of power in society.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © School of Oriental and African Studies 1972

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

2 Schiffrin, H. Z., Sun Yat-sen and the origins of the Chinese revolution, Berkeley, 1968Google Scholar.

3 The continuing influence of anarchism even during the second decade of the twentieth century is strikingly illustrated by the example of Mao Tse-tung, who in 1919 still regarded Kropotkin as superior to Marx. See his article, The great union of the popular masses’, translated in China Quarterly, 49, 1972, 79Google Scholar.

4 China in revolution proposes standardized English equivalents for the names of organizations prominent during this period. These have been used in the present review to facilitate reference to the volume, even though not all the authors have employed them in their own monographs.