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Qin Hui (historian)

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Qin Hui (2011)

Qin Hui (Chinese: 秦晖; pinyin: Qín Huī; born 1953) is a Chinese historian and public intellectual. He previously held the position of Professor of History, Institute of Humanities and Social Sciences, Tsinghua University, Beijing. He is now an adjunct professor in the Department of Government and Public Administration, at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.[1]

Career

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Born in December 1953, he suffered from congenital glaucoma and was blind in his right eye right after birth. He sought medical treatment in Guangxi and Hunan, and finally underwent ophthalmic surgery at Fenyang Road Hospital (now the Eye and ENT Hospital of Fudan University) in Shanghai to save the vision in his left eye. But even after the surgery, Qin Hui's vision in his left eye was still poor due to the sequelae of optic nerve atrophy caused by congenital glaucoma.[2]

Education

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At the beginning of the Cultural Revolution, Qin Hui was a first-year student at Nanning No. 4 Middle School. In 1967, when the province of Guangxi was divided into two major factions, Qin Hui became a member of the "Fourth Middle School Reform Union", the grass-roots organisation of the "Four Twenty-Two" faction of Guangxi in his school. In May 1968, he left Nanning and went with his mother to his grandmother's house in Ningbo, Zhejiang Province. From 1969 to 1978, he was embedded in a production team in Tianlin County, Guangxi, where he joined the Communist Youth League of China and Chinese Communist Party.[citation needed]

In 1978, Qin Hui passed the preliminary examination for postgraduate study, and was given 150 yuan by the authorities for travelling expenses to Lanzhou, where he passed the re-examination. Because of his poor eyesight, Lanzhou University tried to refuse to admit him, but at the insistence of his master's tutor, Zhao Lisheng(Chinese: 赵俪生), a pioneer in the history of the Chinese Peasant War and the history of the agrarian system, Qin Hui eventually managed to enrol at Lanzhou University.[2] In 1981, Qin Hui received his master's degree in history from Lanzhou University.[citation needed]

Researching and Teaching

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In 1982, he taught at Shaanxi Normal University and was promoted to professor at Shaanxi Normal University in 1992.[citation needed]

Qin's primary field is economic history and peasant studies. Since 1992 he has emerged as a prominent public intellectual, taking a stand on a range of issues, often in conflict with the official doctrines of the Chinese government. His general focus is China's agrarian history. Qin is a writer in the Sinosphere and the Chinese-speaking Internet, where collections of his works are commonly found. An important case in point is his doctrine of "issues versus isms" (wenti yu zhuyi).[citation needed]

Banning of Moving Away from the Imperial Regime

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In December 2015, Qin Hui's new book Moving Away from the Imperial Regime (走出帝制; Zǒuchū Dìzhì), a collection of articles examining how the "dream" of constitutional democracy fell apart in China in the early 20th century after the country broke free from the Qing imperial order, was banned by the Chinese government. The book was a bestseller before the ban.[3] "It's like they want to kill someone and won't even let him complain about it," Qin commented; "I can't talk about this matter." An anonymous employee at the book's publisher said that the book had "quality problems". The ban was issued days before China celebrated its second annual Constitution Day.[4]

Views

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In terms of political ideology, Qin Hui defends a left-liberal position.[5] He favors privatization under strict conditions of democratic openness. However he opposes market fundamentalism in its Chinese forms, and seeks to introduce institutions of social democracy, including some aspects of the welfare state. He strongly defends liberty as a political value, and often allies with other Chinese intellectuals labeled "liberal".[6] He has engaged in polemics with the Chinese New Left, particularly its more populist and nationalist forms. He has for example signed petitions protesting chauvinistic responses to the September 11 attacks in New York City.[citation needed]

As a public intellectual, Qin has worked to initiate debates on social justice. Having himself been sent down to work as a peasant in a poor mountainous region of Southwest China in the Cultural Revolution, Qin has argued that China's peasantry suffers from a grave lack of social justice to the present day. At the same time, he has stated in his historical research that the peasantry has a strong tendency to enhance their citizen status whenever possible (whereas the urban working class has often tended to demand restitution of the dependent client status it enjoyed under the Maoist planned economy).[citation needed]

Qin has drawn on the work of Alexander Chayanov, Eric Wolf and other writers on agrarian society to attack cultural essentialism in studies of the Chinese peasantry, which often takes the form of portraying the peasantry as permanently imbued with Confucianism and the collectivist ethics of the feudal patriarchal lineage. Qin has been concerned to show that history rather than culture provides a solid explanatory framework for the empirical phenomena.[citation needed]

Contrary to the received Maoist view which emphasizes peasant wars as expressions of class struggle, in his research on agrarian history Qin concludes that the most significant fault-line in the countryside was not between peasant and landlord, but between peasant and official. This has obvious consequences for interpreting contemporary rural China.[citation needed]

Personal life

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Qin Hui is married with one daughter. His wife, Jin Yan (金雁) is an eminent scholar of Eastern European and Russian affairs in her own right, often collaborating with Qin under the nom-de-plume Su Wen (苏文).[7]

History lectures on the web

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Faculty". www.gpa.cuhk.edu.hk. Retrieved 2020-02-24.
  2. ^ a b Qin, Hui (2018-12-09). "Qin Hui: A Brush with Darkness". Aisixiang (in Chinese).
  3. ^ ZHAO, KIKI (4 December 2015). "On China's Constitution Day, Book on Constitutionalism Largely Disappears". New York Times. Retrieved 9 December 2015.
  4. ^ Mitchell, Tom (December 3, 2015). "Book by prominent Chinese academic 'banned'". Financial Times. Retrieved 9 December 2015.
  5. ^ 马立诚 (2012). 当代中国八种社会思潮. 北京: 社会科学文献出版社. p. 219.
  6. ^ "秦晖访谈(三):无限权力和有限责任". 华尔街日报中文网. 2013-05-15. Archived from the original on 2022-11-24. Retrieved 2022-11-24 – via 爱思想.
  7. ^ "秦蓓蓓:秦老爹的书事_秦晖". www.sohu.com. Archived from the original on 2023-02-11. Retrieved 2023-01-24.

Further reading

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  • Kelly, David (August 2005). "Guest editor's Introduction". The Chinese Economy. 38 (4): 3–11. doi:10.1080/10971475.2005.11033531. S2CID 219305447.
  • Hui, Qin (August 2005). "The common baseline of modern thought". The Chinese Economy. 38 (4): 12–22. doi:10.1080/10971475.2005.11033529. S2CID 152998087.
  • Hui, Qin (March–April 2003). "Dividing the big family assets". New Left Review. II (20). New Left Review.
  • Qin Hui and Su Wen, Tianyuanshi yu kuangxiangqu–Guanzhong moshi yu qianjindai shehuide zairenshi (Pastorals and rhapsodies: the Central Shaanxi model in rethinking pre-modern society) (Beijing: Zhongyang bianyi chubanshe, 1996).
  • Qin Hui, Wenti yu zhuyi (Issues and isms) (Changchun chubanshe, 1999).
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