- Crescent Moon Society
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The Crescent Moon Society was a Chinese literary society founded by the poet Xu Zhimo in 1923, which operated until 1931. It was named after The Crescent Moon, a poem by Rabindranath Tagore. In addition to Xu Zhimo, its other members included leading author and educator Hu Shi, poet Wen Yiduo, writers Liang Shih-chiu and Shen Congwen, Rao Mengkan, and sociologist Pan Guangdan.
The Crescent Moon Society—along with other aspects of China's literary establishment at that time—was part of the larger New Culture Movement.
It engaged in running debates with the "art for politics' sake" (and Chinese Communist Party-driven) League of the Left-Wing Writers.[1]
The organisation dissolved shortly after the death of Xu Zhimo in November 1931.
See also
References
- Literary Societies of Republican China
- Modern Chinese Literary Thought (p. 497)
- The Columbia Companion to Modern East Asian Literature (p. 368)
- Twentieth-century Chinese Translation Theory (p. 198)
- The Cambridge History of China (p. 430)
- India and China in the Colonial World (p. 94)
- China (p. 355)
Notes
- ^ Fairbank, John King; Feuerwerker, Albert; Twitchett, Denis Crispin (1986). The Cambridge history of China. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521243386, 9780521243384. to excerpt
Categories:- Literary societies
- Chinese history stubs
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