K. C. Hsiao

K. C. Hsiao
Born 29 December 1897
Taihe County, Jiangxi, Qing Empire
Died 4 November 1981(1981-11-04) (aged 83)
Seattle, Washington, United States
Fields Political Science, Philosophy
Institutions University of Washington
Tsinghua University
Sichuan University
National Taiwan University
Alma mater Cornell University
Notable students David R. Knechtges
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese 蕭公權
Simplified Chinese 萧公权

K. C. Hsiao (Chinese: 蕭公權; pinyin: Xiāo Gōngquán; 29 December 1897  4 November 1981) was a Chinese scholar and educator, best known for his contributions to Chinese political science and history. Hsiao first travelled to the United States in 1920,[1] remaining there for six years and earning a Ph.D. from Cornell University in 1926.[2] He returned to China and was professor of political science at Yenching University from 1930 to 1932, then at Tsinghua University from 1932 to 1937.[3] With the outbreak of the Second Sino-Japanese War in 1937, he left to teach at Sichuan University and Kwang Hua University (now East China Normal University). Frustrated by the shortage of research materials produced by the Chinese Civil War, he went to teach at National Taiwan University in 1949, and continued to the United States later that year.[2] He taught at the University of Washington initially as a visiting professor, and from 1959 as a tenured professor from 1949 to 1968.

Hsiao's magnum opus was his Zhongguo zhengzhi sixiang shi (History of Chinese Political Thought), an authoritative work that traces Chinese political thought from its earliest recorded history in the Shang dynasty to his day. Hsiao hoped that the twentieth century would come to embody 'liberal socialism', thereby reconciling the political movements of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.[2]

Selected works

  • Volume 1 translated into English by Frederick W. Mote as A History of Chinese Political Thought, Volume 1: From the Beginning to the Sixth Century AD (1979). Princeton: Princeton University Press.

References

Citations
  1. Zhou Mingzhi, "Xiao Gongquan (Hsiao Kung-Ch'üan) and American Sinology", Chinese Studies in History, 41:1 (Fall 2007), pp.41-94
  2. 1 2 3 Edmund S. K. Fung, The Intellectual Foundations of Chinese Modernity (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010): 243.
  3. Antoon de Baets, Censorship of Historical Thought: a World Guide, 1945-2000 (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2002): 100.
Works cited
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/6/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.