Fei Xiao Tong
Fei Xiao Tong
Fei Xiao Tong
Towards a Peoples
Anthropology
...under our social system, theory is linked
with practice; in a society where science is
made to serve politics, it is necessary for a
scientific worker to estimate the effects of
his work on society. This is not just a
question of personal morality but also a
question of what is good or bad for the
majority of the people. Only when the
truthfulness of theories is being constantly
examined in practice can we steadily push
research work in a scientific direction and
make it a prime mover of social progress
Towards a Peoples
Anthropology
To train and educate national cadres
means to train and educate outstanding
members from the laboring masses of the
minorities who are closely bound by flesh
and blood with their own people, fully
acquainted with the latters language and
conditions, and knowing how to impart a
rational understanding of actuality and to
help them get organized and show a
whole-hearted devotion to their own
peoples well-being. The social reform of
Chinas minorities was successfully
Conclusion
Robert Redfield described Fei as: A man
who has written widely, talked much and
acted fearlessly toward the solution of the
immense social problems of China. Fei
regarded anthropology and sociology as
tools for the public good and his
intellectual mission as being to ensure that
they were used as such.
Certainly, after 1980, his life was once
again that of the public intellectual, with
influential appointments, such as deputy
chairman of the Chinese Peoples Political
Conclusion
Fei continued as a leading Chinese
academic until his death, writing, lecturing
and also broadcasting. He travelled,
including outside China and received
international honours such as the
Malinowski Medal and the Huxley
Memorial Medal.
He has, however, a further significance as
a prominent Chinese public intellectual
both before and after the Cultural
Revolution. It should be noted that, while
his first period was marked by optimism,
his second was characterized by caution
Some Books
The dilemma of a Chinese
Intellectual, (translated by J.P.
McGough, M. E. Sharpe, New York,
1979.
Towards a peoples anthropology,
New World Press, Beijing, 1981.
From the soil: the origins of Chinese
society, University of California Press,
Berkeley, 1992.
Fei Xiaotong and sociology in
revolutionary China, R.D. Arkush,
Thank You!
W. J. Morgan
john.morgan@nottingham.ac.uk