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Liang Shu-ming and Chinese Communism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 February 2009

Abstract

In the name of thought reform in Mainland China, there have been many campaigns against the ideas of non-communist Chinese thinkers. For the scale and vehemence of the campaigns against them, two targets have been conspicuous: Hu Shih and Liang Shu-ming. The former was an exponent of western liberal ideas; the latter of Chinese traditional values. One must assume that the influence of their ideas was still strong in the minds of the Chinese people, since only this can explain such extensive and intensive criticism.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 1970

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References

1 There have been other studies of particular aspects of Liang's thought. See, for instance, Lyman P., Van Slyke, “Liang Sou-ming and the Rural Reconstruction Movement,Journal of Asian Studies, Vol. XVIII (1959), pp. 457474Google Scholar; and O'Bryant, A. H., “Liang Sou-ming: His Response to the West,Harvard Papers on China, Vol. 7 (1953), pp. 133.Google Scholar

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