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Xu Jilin and the Thought Work of China's Public Intellectuals

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2006

Abstract

This article takes recent theoretical essays by Shanghai scholar and public intellectual, Xu Jilin, and other scholars of the history of thought and culture (sixiang wenhua shi) as a case study of efforts by intellectuals in the People's Republic of China to define and promote a role as public intellectuals separate from the party-state. This analysis suggests that political liberalism is used in such intellectual discourse to explain the social experience of intellectuals in China today and to promote a renewed public role for them. This public intellectual discourse is characterized by the continued privileging of sixiang (thought), by the naturalizing of foreign theories about liberalism, and by the use of such thought work to argue for a renewed public role for intellectuals as interpreters of public issues rather than as legislators of public values.

Type
Articles
Copyright
© The China Quarterly, 2006

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Footnotes

The research comes from a project on contemporary thought and society in China funded by the Canadian Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council. I am grateful to the many colleagues who offered criticisms and suggestions, particularly members of the UBC China Studies Group, as well as Gloria Davies, Ken Foster, David Ownby, Michael Schoenhals, Eddy U, James Williams, Michelle Yeh and Wenhsin Yeh.